bring any specialists with them who have experience with nuclear power plants, with nuclear facilities, with radiation. they had no concern for their own personnel, their own soldiers reporter: ukrainian authorities say that before russian soldiers left chernobyl they stole computers and even coffee makers from the plant as well as looted a nearby hotel. lester gabe gutierrez, thank you. another major part of this war, the exodus of refugees more than 4 million ukrainians have made their way to neighboring countries. tonight how some are adjusting to every day life in exile in poland dasha burns is there reporter: this has long been a city of survival poland s architecture was spared the nazi s bombs in world war ii. now it s a city full of survivors, refugees fleeing today s war. i think that my life just stopped at the moment the war
and more permanent home i should start looking for a job just to feed my kids and myself i don t know reporter: you re not ready to build a life outside of ukraine? we re not ready because we left all our life there in ukraine. reporter: starting a new life here making the loss of home all the more final dasha burns, nbc news, krakow, poland more good news on the jobs frontch for 11 months now the economy has created 400,000 jobs while the unemployment rate fell 3.6% but soaring inflation remains a serious problem in the economy. here s tom costello. reporter: with the country seemingly on the backside of the pandemic more evidence the country is running at full throttle 400,000 americans found jobs in march. the unemployment now
started. reporter: she was a corporate attorney in lviv now in krakow her days are spent with laundry inside this seminary where she s waiting with her two kids. how was it feel to have your life change so dramatically so quickly? you just start to realize the most important thing is safety reporter: like nearly everyone we ve met her goal is to go home to ukraine rather than grow roots here in poland. but down the hall another family has had to settle in a bit more the war has interrupted her mother s cancer treatment. in poland she s able to get care again. we re praying for her health, she says, and for our family left behind in ukraine. for her kids school now means polish pe classes, new friends and a new language both know what comes next is finding a job