Russia bombards Kyiv in major strike
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After four years of war, life in Lukianivka, the most frequently hit part of the Ukrainian capital, is a mix of adaptability and endurance, defiance and denial, resignation and resilience.
Pets, homework and pillows on the platform. This is how Kyiv residents spent a recent night under missile and drone attack.
Parties and cultural events have become a form of resistance to the bombardments, turning Ukraine’s capital into a place where life and death coexist side by side
What does daily life look like for a foreign correspondent in Ukraine? CBS News' Aidan Stretch discusses covering the war across TV and social media.
When 17-year-old Karolina Shevchuk's phone warned a Russian missile was headed towards her district of Kyiv, she decided against seeking shelter, choosing instead to stay in her apartment.
Olena was forced to flee Kyiv without her dog Taffy – but thanks to pet charity Woodgreen, Taffy didn’t just survive the warzone, she’s now thriving
(JTA) — KYIV, Ukraine — Viktoria Maksimovich’s students at the Sha’alavim Jewish Day School no longer run for shelters when air raid sirens sound. “They don’t want to hear the alarms. They don’t care about the shots and bombs. They don’t ...
