<Anchor>



Under this situation, as you can see, refugees are flocking to the Ukrainian border to escape the battlefield.

The remaining Koreans also joined the escape procession, and Correspondent Im Sang-beom, who is on the Polish-Ukraine border, will deliver the news.



<Reporter>



A long line of nearly 10 kilometers was created at the checkpoint entering Poland across the border. 



It is essential to carry a passport and a corona negative confirmation certificate, but the waiting time is getting longer as refugees flock to it. 



The highway exiting to Poland is repeatedly bottlenecked and delayed, and trains to and from Ukraine and Poland have also been suspended. 



Due to the communication blockade in Russia, wireless phone connections in Ukraine are also not smooth.



As oil prices and inflation fluctuate on news of Russian troops advancing into Kiev, Poland is also being directly affected. 



As you can see, the procession of hoarding equipment to buy oil in advance continues endlessly at each gas station.



[Andriana/Polish: I have already been waiting for 45 minutes to add oil.]



There are still more than 90 Koreans in Ukraine, including embassy staff. 



It is known that some of them are trying to enter Poland via Lviv, where the Korean Embassy in Kiev has set up a temporary office.



[Kim Do-soon / Kiev, Ukraine: (Do you have enough oil? How much oil in the car?) Yes, I can still run about 200 kilometers more.

As much as possible, go west from Kiev, so towards the Polish border first.]



Even the Koreans who want to cross the borders of Hungary, Romania, and Moldova, it seems that most of the remaining Koreans will escape the danger zone in a day or two.