At least 677,000 Ukrainians have fled their country amid Russian invasion

Thousands of refugees leave Ukraine, women and children flee as the men remain to fight

At least 677,000 Ukrainians have fled their country as of Tuesday, the sixth day of Russia's invasion, according to UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency.

It's an exodus that shows no signs of slowing, and appears set to become the largest refugee crisis in Europe this century, UNHCR says. 

At Ukraine's border with Poland, refugees line up for more than 20 miles in freezing temperatures, yearning for safety, Chris Livesay reports for "CBS Mornings."

At Lviv's main train station in western Ukraine, thousands more try desperately to get out. 

But not everyone can. Women and small children are fleeing the country while men of fighting age are running into battle.

Ukrainian Pavlo Bilodid, 33, kisses his wife and daughter goodbye as they prepare to board a bus to Poland at Lviv bus main station on March 1, 2022.  Bernat Armangue/AP

Men, some difficult not to call boys, now face frontline combat, even though they've never held a gun, like 18-year-old medical student Jaroslav.

He said he never imagined facing something like this: "It's like a nightmare."  

Half of those who have fled are in Poland. Some 90,000 are in Hungary. And 60,000 are in Moldova, 50,000 are in Slovakia and 40,000 are in Romania, Filippo Grandi, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said Tuesday.

"People are on the move, and more will come," he said.

Pamela Falk contributed to this report. 

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