<Anchor>



News from Ukraine.

A video has been released of a doctor treating numerous soldiers and civilians in southern Mariupol, where Russia launched a concentrated attack and Ukraine fought a decisive battle.

I cared for the wounded regardless of nationality, and the video taken by the doctor shows the horrors of the war as it is.



Reporter Kim Seok-jae reports.



<Reporter> A



wounded soldier is rushed into an ambulance.



[Yulia Fayevska/Ukrainian doctor: I will put down the stretcher.

Calm down and don't worry.]



Soon after, another wounded soldier is evacuated by helicopter.



[Yulia Fayevska/Ukrainian Doctor: Be careful and move quickly.] In



the middle of the battlefield, the Ukrainian doctor Yulia Fayevska is treating the wounded.



In March, two weeks before Mariupol was virtually taken over by Russian forces, a miniature camera was placed over his head to record her treatment.



It was to make a vivid impression of the horrors of war.



[(No fuel for the ambulance. We're going to die soon.) I know.

But there will be something to do.]



When the child she was treating dies, she bursts into tears,



[Yulia Fayevska/Ukrainian doctor: This child is dead, but the other child can be saved with CPR.]



He even persuades and heals those who do not like the treatment of enemy Russian prisoners of war.



[(Bad guy…you killed our people and our children.) Calm down.

Calm down.]



[(Are you going to treat this Russian soldier?) It must be.

They are prisoners of war.]



Paievska was arrested by the Russian army on March 16th after passing this video she had taken to the Associated Press reporter who remained in Mariupol and covered the story until the end. .



Meanwhile, the Russian Ministry of Defense said more than 1,700 Ukrainian soldiers surrendered to the Russian side after fighting to the last at Mariupol Azoustal.



(Video editing: Yonghwa Jung)