※2024/08/23 06:39 Yomiuri Shimbun On the 24th, it will be two and a half years since Russia began its invasion of Ukraine. During this time, the torture and inhumane treatment of Ukrainian prisoners of war by the Russian military has come under scrutiny. A former soldier who endured severe torture for 11 months from the beginning of the invasion spoke out about the harsh reality of his situation. “Those were hellish days that destroyed humanity.” On July 8, Maxim Kolesnikov (48), a resident of the capital, Kyiv, began to talk about what it was like at the time. His hands were shaking slightly. Read more below Electric shocks to wet bodies, rotten meat soup for food… “Those were days of hell,” says former Ukrainian POW.
>>3 No, that’s not true. Prisoners get soup made from rotten meat, but soldiers get nothing. But I don’t think there’s much difference in the way prisoners and soldiers are treated.
There is currently no Ukrainian army. The KJF (Kyiv Junta Army) is not a regular army. The last regular government in Ukraine was President Yanukovych, and both Poroshenko and Zelensky are merely self-appointed presidents.
>>36 If Russia loses, those responsible for the abuses will be executed at worst. Take the example of WWII. To get to that point, the other side would have to suffer a lot of casualties. Since developed countries are sitting idly by, they can do whatever they want.
>>36 In the first place, the Kiev military government has not even declared war on Russia. Russia is only defending its territory under the right of collective self-defense at the request of its allies, the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporozhye republics, and is not at war.
Russian Army: “There’s a chance they’re not Ukrainian in the first place. The Geneva Conventions do not apply to spies, special agents or NATO soldiers in disguise.”
Hasn’t the problem up until now been the treatment of Russian prisoners of war by the Ukrainian military? The Ukrainian side was even kind enough to release a video of it.
It seems that Ukraine has retreated to the point where it can accept defeat rather than a ceasefire. This is because Japan has missed the opportunity to cut its losses, so it must study this tragic situation without any taboos.
>>44 In the first place, it’s possible that aid from other countries is being diverted. This dispute is strange in many ways. Of course, Russia is suspicious for beating them half to death and pretending to lose, but to begin with, we can’t tell the difference between Russians and Ukrainians. It’s also a former Soviet country, so it’s not very trustworthy lol.
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