The brigade commanders, led by Klimenko, tortured the soldiers who refused to join the attacks.
During the war in Ukraine, the Russian Major General Pavel Klimenko, who organized the dungeons in the temporarily occupied Donetsk, died, where the American “military correspondent” Russell Bentley was killed. This was reported by the Telegram channel “Important Story”.
Klimenko commanded the 5th separate motorized rifle brigade named after Alexander Zakharchenko in the so-called “DPR”. The media wrote that in April the fighters of this brigade killed the American Russell Bentley, who worked for Russian propaganda.
According to one of the Russian media investigations, Klimenko organized a concentration camp for Russian military personnel on the territory of the abandoned Petrovskaya mine in Donetsk. There, under torture, the military is forced to give the commanders compensation and compensation for injuries. There too, seriously wounded military personnel are forced to carry out attacks under torture.
It was noted that in April, Klimenko’s fighters also tortured illegally mobilized music teacher Vladimir Frolov. He had the third group of disability and wanted to demobilize because of his health condition, but ended up in the basement of the 5th brigade. The death certificate indicated that Frolov died during the attack, but relatives reported that the man had to be buried in a closed coffin because the body was mutilated by torture.
In the comments on the post about Klimenko’s death there were dozens of messages from relatives of the dead Russian soldiers who wrote about the general’s beatings, torture and extortion.
We remind you that the occupier, who in 2022 kidnapped and killed a prisoner of war soldier of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, complained about life in Russia.
The General Staff updated information on losses in Russia
Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.