Thank you very much to everyone. To Michael, and to everyone who's joining us from Mariupol and Kiev, I would say, duzhe dyakuyu. Thank you very much for being here.
My riding in Toronto is home to part of that diaspora you were mentioning, Michael. The country, as you have accurately indicated, is replete with a huge Ukrainian diaspora that dates back 125 years. It is very well integrated, very well established, and very vocal. They communicate to people like the chair, and they communicate to people like myself about the concerns they see on the ground.
I wanted to start my questioning by asking you a bit about a fact we've heard a lot about here today, the scope of the displacement. The sheer numbers are staggering, as Mr. Saroya outlined. In the span of two years you're looking at nearly two million people in movement.
Can you describe to us a little about the movement of people leaving the Donbass, how far they are moving within the country, and what impact that's having on local infrastructure and institutions in the rest of Ukraine?