hospital and returns to hospitals, but it covers all of life and death in ukraine in these two weeks. what else have you seen that gives you some sense of where we might be going? thank you, lawrence, for the generous introduction. happy to be with you tonight. i kind of have a sense of great tragedy and loss. very visceral. exemplified, for example, in that scene that you read from the children s hospital in kyiv where young victims of the conflict, like that young boy are bringing brought as well as all these other children, hundreds of children who have been in the hospital, waiting for care, waiting for chemotherapy for bone marrow transplants, we re now living in damp basements underneath the hospital to hide out from air rates or being in the best-case, one might say, being
injured in the war, though it is increasingly, indeed, treating those patients, but it has hundreds of patients who were at the hospital waiting for bone marrow transplants, children undergoing chemotherapy, people who needed stem cell therapies, and those children now are forced to live in a dark, dank basement where they are hiding out because of the danger of missile strikes and bombing raids in kyiv, conditions that no child should be forced to live in or through, let alone one who is undergoing chemotherapy or needs a potential life-saving surgery. my visits to this children s hospital were really illustrative of the wider condition facing not just people across kyiv but across the country, and it was brought home to me in a really acute way. joshua, there s almost no way