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Added on the 01/09/2017 12:29:00 - Copyright : AFP EN
"Putin promised that they wouldn’t bomb and agreed they’d give safe passage so they could get the grain out - but what does he do, he bombs" says one Odessa resident after Russian missiles hit the Ukraine port. Kyiv called the attack a "spit in the face" of a day-old deal between the warring sides to resume cereal exports blocked by the conflict, and help ease a growing global food crisis.
Large numbers of Russia head to Georgia with many hoping to stay there due to increasing tensions back home. View on euronews
In Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city, people have been living in the metro for a month due to shelling.View on euronews
Thousands of residents continued to hunker down in the underground train stations of Ukraine's second most populous city on Saturday as Russia continued its aerial assault above.View on euronews
Residents recall the moment fire broke out in their public housing building in the Bronx, New York, killing 19 people. "It's like you cannot breathe, it's like you're being suffocated," Michael Joseph tells AFP.