Residents of Kherson believe that the Russians destroyed the bodies of their soldiers who died in heavy fighting last summer.
The occupying Russian troops apparently burned the bodies of their dead soldiers in a landfill in Kherson. On Monday, November 21, the British edition of The Guardian wrote about this, citing many testimonies of local residents.
Citizens told reporters that they repeatedly saw trucks dumping black bags in landfills, which were then thrown in the trash or burned. At the same time, “there was a smell of burnt rotting meat in the air.”
As Kherson residents pointed out, this happened in the most remote part of the landfill, where no one is allowed to enter now, because the territory has not been checked for mines and unexploded ordnance. They also added that they were not allowed to enter the landfill and squatters. Moreover, they set up a roadblock in front of the garbage dump.
Residents of the house, from where the landfill can be seen, told reporters that a huge cloud of smoke rose during the burning, and the smell made them sick.
“It smelled like burnt hair and, you know, like a dentist – when they drill a tooth before putting a filling. And the smoke was so thick that the nearby building couldn’t be seen,” said one of the resident of this house.
The interlocutors of the publication believe that in this way the Russians removed the corpses of their own soldiers.
“Every time our army fired at the Russians there, they brought the remains to the firing range and burned them,” said one of the local residents.
The publication added that journalists found Russian uniforms and helmets in a landfill.
It should be noted that in the Kherson region, 11 places were found where the military of the Russian Federation illegally detained citizens, and 63 bodies of people tortured by the Russians.
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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.