Ukraine war could push 13 million more people into food insecurity
U.S. and U.N. officials say the war will "have global context impact beyond anything we've seen since World War II."
Li Cohen is a senior social media producer for CBS News. Li graduated from Nova Southeastern University in South Florida in 2017 with a degree in communication and media studies before getting her master's degree in journalism at NYU in 2019.
Li started her career in South Florida at The Seminole Tribune, a newspaper run by The Seminole Tribe of Florida, where she reported on local and national tribal issues and events while also serving as copy editor. Before joining CBS News, where she primarily covers environmental and social justice issues and produces documentaries, she covered local news at amNewYork. She has won awards for her environmental, news and coverage of Native issues, been a nominee for The Webby Awards and has won an Anthem Award for the CBS News climate change-focused Instagram page, @CBSNewsPlanet.
U.S. and U.N. officials say the war will "have global context impact beyond anything we've seen since World War II."
"They have broken everything," one Mariupol resident said. "We have nowhere to go."
Dmitriy Boyko has received "very disturbing" texts from his cousins stuck in Ukraine, including one in Kyiv with her sick mother: "We are getting bombed at."
"We will fight till the end — as best we can," she said.
"I know it's not easy to change the world," he said. "But it's worth it to try."
"A new life is born, despite all the horrors happening around," a doctor said. "That's why we still have hope."
"It's like my voice to the war to talk about what's happening now in Ukraine," one illustrator told CBS News.
Channel One editor and producer Marina Ovsyannikova interrupted Monday night's broadcast with a sign that said: "You are being lied to."
As prices at the pump surge, GOP leaders see the suspended oil pipeline as a solution. But the answer isn't so simple.
Some families have had to leave their pets behind, leaving their animals with notes that say, "We hope we can find our dogs and cats again."
Before the war began, Yaroslava Antipina had a normal life in Kyiv. Today, her entire life is packed into a small suitcase.
A children's hospital and maternity facility in Mariupol suffered "colossal" damage from what Ukrainian officials said was a Russian strike.
By night, Viktor Vemuna is in a bomb shelter with his family. During the day, he's doing everything he can to help his fellow Ukrainians survive.
Nadia hasn't been to the seaside in 20 years. The thought of returning is helping her get through what feels like a "millennia" of war in Kharkiv.
"It's hard to wrap my mind around the fact that in '41, I had to hide in the basement of this building, and that I'm going to have do that again now."