- Swiatek sweeps into Melbourne semis, Sinner faces home test
- Rampant Swiatek sweeps into Australian Open semi-final with Keys
- Lanterns light up southern Chinese city ahead of Lunar New Year
- 'Worst ever' Man Utd turn to Europa League as saving grace
- Brazil saw 79% jump in area burned by fires in 2024: monitor
- Resilient Keys beats Svitolina to reach Australian Open semi-finals
- Most Asian markets rise after Trump AI pledge but China tariff woes return
- Djokovic mentally ready for Zverev but worried about creaking body
- As Trump takes aim at EVs, how far will rollback go?
- No home, no insurance: The double hit from Los Angeles fires
- Trump targets opponents, faces criticism from catherdral pulpit
- Ichiro becomes first Japanese player elected to MLB Hall of Fame
- Relentless Swiatek, dizzy Sinner eye Australian Open semi-finals
- Colombian forces edge into guerrilla strongholds
- Netflix reports surge in subscribers, new price hikes
- Panama complains to UN over Trump canal threat, starts audit
- Rubio, on first day, warns China with Asian partners
- Ichiro, the Japanese Hall of Famer who helped redefine baseball
- Ichiro becomes first Japanese elected to MLB Hall of Fame
- Rare snow socks New Orleans as Arctic blast chills much of US
- Liverpool clinch Champions League last-16 berth, Barcelona win epic
- Partner demands release of Argentine officer held for 'terrorism' in Venezuela
- Sad clown: 'Joker 2,' Phoenix and Gaga nominated for Razzies
- Trump's birthright citizenship move challenges US identity: analysts
- Slot not sure if Champions League top spot 'an advantage'
- Barca score wild Benfica comeback victory, reach Champions League last 16
- Atletico comeback win 'no coincidence', says Simeone
- Mexican president urges 'cool heads' in face of Trump threats
- Alvarez sends Atletico past Leverkusen late as both sides see red
- Liverpool's magnificent seven secures Champions League progress
- Barca score wild comeback victory at Benfica
- Rubio starts as top US diplomat meeting Asian partners
- Troubled Dortmund's slump continues at Bologna in Champions League
- Netflix surges past 300 mn subscribers
- Trump tests whether bulldozer can also be peacemaker
- Trump starts firing opponents, faces criticism in cathedral sermon
- Musk salute at Trump rally celebrated by extremists online
- Monaco down Villa to boost Champions League qualification hopes
- France holds off Spain as world's tourist favourite
- Mystery French designer Kanoush channels MMA at Paris fashion show
- Bishop lectures stony-faced Trump in church
- Guardiola seeks to take pressure off Man City before PSG Champions League clash
- Huge fire guts Turkish ski resort hotel, killing 76
- States sue over Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
- Haaland 'confident' over outcome of Man City charges after signing new deal
- Trump's UN pick blasts 'anti-Semitic rot' in world body
- German opposition leader Merz urges united EU stance on Trump
- Trump pardons of Capitol rioters spark jubilation, outrage
- Canada vows strong response, Mexico urges calm in face of Trump threats
- Trump's climate retreat will have 'significant impact' on COP30: Brazil
Tired and emotional, Ukrainians arrive by train in Berlin
At Berlin central station, commuters rush past a mother and her four children as they stand bewildered on the platform, weighed down by heavy luggage.
Two of them, still toddlers, are wearing hats and jackets in blue and yellow, the colours of the flag of Ukraine, the country from where they have just fled.
Germany has opened its doors to refugees from Ukraine since Russia's invasion of the country began last week, displacing more than half a million people already.
National rail operator Deutsche Bahn has laid on free travel for refugees and is also preparing to charter additional trains from the Polish border.
"We are going to Dresden (in eastern Germany). We have a good friend there who said he could find us a place to stay," 17-year-old Ukrainian student Maxym Floria tells AFP.
Floria set off four days ago with his mother and younger brother from Izmail, in the Odessa region, and has travelled through Moldova, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland to get here.
"If Odessa fell we didn't stand a chance, so we decided to leave with my family," he said.
Only a relatively small number have made it to Germany so far: around 1,800, according to a spokesman for the interior ministry.
- Men left behind -
Of the more than 500,000 people who have left Ukraine to seek refuge in neighbouring countries, more than half of them are in Poland, according to the UNHCR.
Floria's father, like all men aged between 18 and 60, has not been allowed to leave Ukraine as he has been called up to fight.
The family are not intending to stay in Germany permanently.
"I firmly believe that we will be able to go home safely and that everyone will fight for our country," Floria said, visibly emotional and exhausted.
Berlin is expecting to see a sharp increase in the number of women and children arriving from Ukraine in the coming days.
The German capital and the surrounding state of Brandenburg have already reactivated some of the systems deployed in 2015 to cope with an influx of refugees from the Middle East, mainly Iraq and Syria.
Ukraine is at least 700 kilometres (430 miles) from Berlin, but Interior Minister Nancy Faeser has repeatedly stressed that Germany's borders are open to those fleeing the conflict.
- Night train from Warsaw -
The Russian invasion has provoked an outpouring of support in Germany, with more than 100,000 people joining a demonstration in Berlin on Sunday to show solidarity with Ukraine.
Some have also taken to social media to organise initiatives to transport food and clothes to the Polish-Ukrainian border and to offer accommodation in Berlin.
The European Union is planning to grant Ukrainians fleeing the war the right to stay and work in the 27-nation bloc for up to three years.
At Berlin Hauptbahnhof, one of the largest stations in Europe, the situation is a far cry from 2015, when Germans welcomed cohorts of refugees from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria by serving them soup and handing out toothbrushes.
On platform 14, police officers and volunteers draped in Ukrainian flags are there to welcome a handful of refugee families who have just arrived on the night train from Warsaw.
Berlin has already prepared 1,300 emergency beds for refugees and is planning to add 1,200 more in the coming days.
In Brandenburg, which borders Poland, accommodation is being readied for 10,000 people, regional interior minister Michael Stuebgen told the RBB broadcaster.
The authorities are also counting on support from the 330,000 Ukrainians or people of Ukrainian origin already living in Germany, many of whom still have family and friends back home.
F.Ramirez--AT