Before the armed invasion of the Russian Federation began, the teenager was kept in a family-type orphanage in the village of Tokarevka near Kherson.
18-year-old Alexander Yakushenko, exiled from Ukraine to Russia, committed suicide. The Russian publication Important Story reported this on Tuesday, December 24.
It was noted that shortly before his death, the young man sent a message to his friends that no one needed him in his new family and that he would kill himself so as not to “ruin” their lives.
The boy’s named father, Alexander Lukashenko, said he did not understand the reasons for the young man’s actions and refused to take responsibility for his death.
Before the start of the Russian Federation’s full-scale war against Ukraine, the teenager was kept in a family-type orphanage in the village of Tokarovka near Kherson. Journalists learned that the head of the establishment, Lydia Sharvarla, began to cooperate with the occupation administration after the invasion of Russian troops. For this he was appointed head of several villages.
Sharvarla is said to have squandered the money intended for housing his students, where he bought a house in the Krasnoyarsk Territory of the Russian Federation.
“The conditions there are as harsh as the pupils of the orphanage in Kherson can be.
Remind you that Russia deported more than 19.5 thousand children from Ukraine. We managed to bring back 1,012 small Ukrainians.
It has been reported that the Russians have posted data on children deported from Ukraine on adoption websites.
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.