60 Minutes and 60 Minutes Overtime are dedicated to covering all aspects of the war in Ukraine. Here are some of those stories.
Ukraine Foreign Minister: “We will be defending our country” (2/20/22)
Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tells 60 Minutes that there are strict rules of engagement and Ukraine will defend its sovereignty should Russia invade. “Will not allow Russia to kill our soldiers, to kill our civilians.”
Refugees by rail: Ukrainians flee war at home (3/6/22)
At a train station in a small Polish town, thousands of Ukrainians pass through in the most rapid refugee crisis in decades.
What 60 Minutes saw in Lviv, Ukraine (4/3/22)
60 Minutes reported on the effort to bring medical supplies to Ukraine. Producer Nicole Young and associate producer Kristin Steve explain what the situation is like on the ground.
Zelenskyy says Ukraine is defending its basic human rights (4/10/22)
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to 60 Minutes’ Scott Pelley: “We are defending the ability for a person to live in the modern world.”
What Scott Pelley has seen in Ukraine (5/1/22)
60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley reflects on the scenes from his reporting on the ground in Ukraine.
How Bellingcat is using TikTok to investigate the war in Ukraine (5/15/22)
The data detectives at Bellingcat showed 60 Minutes how social media is providing evidence of alleged Russian war crimes and other atrocities.
The toll of Russia’s war on the children of Ukraine (10/2/22)
Three Ukrainian children were among those sheltering in public schools when they became victims of Russian bomb attacks. They share their stories — and their song — with 60 Minutes.
The gravediggers of Bucha (10/16/22)
Over 27 days, Russian forces killed more than 400 civilians in Bucha. Ukrainians negotiated with the enemy for permission to bury their neighbors. This is the story of the three Ukrainian men who gathered the bodies of their dead neighbors and buried them in the shadow of St. Andrews Church in Bucha.
Fighting cancer in a war zone (12/18/22)
Sick children who have stayed behind in Ukraine are fighting cancer while the country around them battles for its own future.