I will first refer to your mention of Mariupol. The situation in Mariupol is horrible—a city with a population of 400,000. Half of the people have left the city, but there are around 100,000 civilians who remain surrounded by Russian forces. The number of civilians killed in Mariupol is already about 20,000. The humanitarian corridor, as I mentioned yesterday, started with the first 100 people who were taken from Mariupol to Zaporizhzhya. That is the most tragic situation overall.
Odessa and the Odessa seaport are the major export routes, not only for the agri-sector, but also for metallurgy and other sectors where Ukraine was exporting a great deal. Of course, it is strategic for us, and not only for us, but for the global commodity markets that Ukraine needs to control the greater Odessa area, in terms of the seaport. That is why I come back to military aid. The timely delivery of military aid is the way for Ukraine to defend our sovereign territory and access to the seaport.