The big picture: Officials say thousands of people remain trapped in the besieged city, with shortages of food, water and medicine. State Department spokesman Ned Price said “some of the most egregious reports of war crimes” by Putin’s forces “came from Mariupol.” The scene on a street in Mariupol under the control of Russian military and pro-Russian separatists on March 29. Photo: Leon Klein / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images People line up for food and supplies outside a Mariupol grocery store on March 29th. Satellite image: Maxar TechnologiesA school damaged by the March 29 bombing of Mariupol. Photo: Leon Klein / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Damage on March 29 in and around the Mariupol theater, which housed more than 1,000 people, including children, when a Russian attack struck and killed at least 300 people earlier this month, according to with local officials. The Russian word for “children” can still be seen outside the theater. Satellite image: Maxar Technologies A woman cooks a meal near an apartment building in Mariupol that was damaged by the March 29 bombing. Photo: Leon Klein / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Apartment buildings and houses in Mariupol destroyed by Russian airstrikes on March 29. Satellite image: Maxar Technologies Mariupol surrounded by locals ruins from the Russian military bombing on March 29. Photo: Leon Klein / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Mariupol apartment buildings on March 29 destroyed by Russian bombing. Satellite image: Maxar TechnologiesA room in a house destroyed by Russian strikes in Mariupol on March 29. Photo: Leon Klein / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images Go deeper … Dashboard: Russian invasion of Ukraine Editor’s note: This article has been updated with more images.