Human Rights Watch, an international advocacy group, called on both Russia and Ukraine to stop using the weapons, and urged the U.S. not to supply them. More than 120 countries have signed on to an international treaty banning the weapons, which typically scatter a large number of smaller so-called bomblets over a large area that can kill or maim unwary civilians months or years later. Russia, Ukraine and the U.S. have all to declined to sign the treaty.
gives it a number of options by escalating whatever happened here to calling it the potential assassination attempt on the president gives them a road map, if you will, to run up another false flag operation, to claim something that proves to be in the end patently untrue, that these perhaps weren t ukrainian drone and has nothing to do with ukraine, but gives president putin a path to perpetrate another act of atrocity on ukrainian civilians. is that what this is about? what ukrainian officials seem to imply is very well aware in a couple of days, the 9th of may are celebration parades in red square right outside the kremlin where you see hundreds of military vehicles normally paraded by all of the big generals and all of the president s men are standing there as they do on platforms as a fly by of russian aircraft and
During a video interview with Gulagu.net, a human rights organisation tracking war crimes committed by Russia in Ukraine, former Russian convicts Azamat Uldarov and Alexey Savichev detailed how they used to kill civilians in Ukraine
Following heavy casualties sustained during the battle of Bakhmut, where both Russia and Ukraine continue to rack up mounting losses, the Ukrainian army requires more manpower