Refugees from Ukraine are queuing up to enter Poland at the Medica border crossing, Poland, on February 28th. (Witek Radwanski / AFP / Getty Images)
The Russian military warns of strikes against targets in Kyiv, according to a statement through state media
There are now more than half a million refugees from Ukraine in neighboring countries, the United Nations said on Monday, with people desperately heading west to Central Europe following Russia’s invasion last week.
Here is a snapshot of the situation on Ukraine’s borders:
Poland: More than 100,000 people crossed from Ukraine to Poland on Monday, according to the Polish border guards, the highest figure received from Ukraine’s EU neighbors since the invasion began.
As of February 24th, border authorities have allowed at least 377,400 people to enter border crossings with Ukraine, according to a tweet on Tuesday.
The longest queue is at the Medica border checkpoint, said border guard spokeswoman Anna Mihalska.
On the Ukrainian side of this border, a 20-kilometer (12-mile) line of vehicles runs through nearby villages. Residents told CNN that the number of people moving to the border has decreased in the last day.
The first few days of the evacuation were chaotic, with many walking long distances to the border in cold conditions, they said. But now many volunteers from local villages have set up temporary shelters and offered food.
A CNN team at the border has spoken to many non-Ukrainian citizens who say employees still give preferential treatment to Ukrainians crossing the border.