Occupants are being sent to the islands of the Dnipro as punishment, - partisans.


Russian commanders are using the storming of the islands of the Dnipro as punishment for their soldiers. This is reported by the public movement of Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars 'Atesh'.
According to 'Atesh', commanders from the 61st Russian Marine Brigade are sending 'zalyotchiki', discipline violators, and even those who do not contribute money to the unit's common fund to storm the islands of the Dnipro.
'Soldiers know that storming the islands is becoming increasingly difficult due to constant breakdowns of boats and jet skis, which Russian servicemen themselves organize according to our instructions. Everyone understands what rotation means - it is practically a death sentence, and many are trying to avoid being sent,' the authors of the 'Atesh' channel write.
It is also noted that those who have enough money try to bribe commanders to have themselves removed from the storming list.
Strict treatment of captives
Earlier, we reported that after the full-scale invasion of Russian troops, employees of the Federal Penitentiary Service of the Russian Federation received orders to be cruel to Ukrainian prisoners and to use violence. The Wall Street Journal reports this.
According to the newspaper, the head of the Federal Penitentiary Service for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad region Igor Potapenko ordered elite unit employees to be cruel to captives. Violence will not be limited, and surveillance cameras that could record torture will be removed. WSJ cites three former employees of the Federal Penitentiary Service, two of whom served in special units, and one was a medic. They entered the witness protection program after providing testimony to the International Criminal Court investigators.
It is worth noting that the forensic expert determined that Ukrainian defender Oleksandr Ishchenko, who served in the 'Azov' regiment and was captured during the defense of Mariupol, died in a pre-trial detention center in Rostov-on-Don from 'closed blunt chest trauma as a result of contact with a blunt object.'
Read also
- New Rules for Distance Learning Introduced in Schools: What Will Change from September 1
- Serving even those with 10 children. How the Israeli mobilization differs from the Ukrainian one
- Defending Ukraine in Sumy and Kharkiv. Let's remember Vasyl Kyrychuk
- Search lasted three days: a 5-year-old boy found in Prykarpattia
- Pensions and assistance to Ukrainians will be paid in a new way: the Pension Fund will receive information from banks
- Israel has postponed Iran's creation of a nuclear bomb for several years