New images from Mariupol underscore the devastation in the strategically important port city in south-eastern Ukraine after weeks of Russian military bombardment.
The big picture: Officials say thousands of people are trapped in the besieged city, with food, water and medicines in short supply. US State Department spokesman Ned Price said that “some of the most egregious reports of possible war crimes” by Putin’s forces “came from Mariupol.”
The scene on a street in Mariupol under the control of the Russian military and pro-Russian separatists on March 29. Photo: Agency Leon Klein/Anadolu via Getty ImagesA large crowd waited for groceries and supplies outside a grocery store in Mariupol on March 29. Satellite Image: Maxar TechnologiesA school in Mariupol damaged by shelling on March 29. Photo: Agency Leon Klein/Anadolu via Getty ImagesDowntown Mariupol showed extensive damage at and near the Mariupol Theater on March 29. The Russian word for “children” can still be seen outside the theater. Satellite Image: Maxar TechnologiesA woman cooks a meal near an apartment in Mariupol that was damaged by shelling on March 29. Photo: Agency Leon Klein/Anadolu via Getty ImagesResidential houses and apartment buildings in Mariupol were destroyed by shelling on March 29. Satellite Image: Maxar TechnologiesResidents of Mariupol surrounded by rubble from the March 29 Russian military bombardment. Photo: Agency Leon Klein/Anadolu via Getty ImagesApartment buildings destroyed by Russian shelling in Mariupol on March 29. Satellite Image: Maxar TechnologiesA room destroyed by Russian shelling in a house in Mariupol on March 2. Photo: Agency Leon Klein/Anadolu via Getty Images
go deeper… Dashboard: Russian invasion of Ukraine
Editor’s Note: This article has been updated with more images.