The New York Times published a video on Monday, verifying a video showing Ukrainian soldiers performing captive Russian soldiers in the Kiev region on March 30, when Russian troops began to leave the area.
A high content of graphic violence shows several Russian corpses and how a Ukrainian soldier shoots corpses lying on the road and wearing a distinctive white ribbon of the Russian army. “She is still alive. Write down these assumptions. Look, he’s still alive. “He is breathing,” they said in a recording broadcast on the Telegram channel. “Glory to Ukraine,” the military repeated with a laugh.
The recording will be made in Dmitrivka, about 11 kilometers from the village of Bucha, where a massacre took place that killed hundreds of people after Russian troops passed by. According to the American newspaper, this may have been the result of an ambush in Ukraine around March 30, when the withdrawal of Russian troops from the Kiev region began.
A few days later, on April 2, the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense posted another video on Twitter informing them of the attack on a Russian convoy, which they called “exact work.” “These are not even people,” added the Ukrainian military, who participated in the video.
The identities of the characters in the record have not yet been determined, although the military calls itself the “Boys from Belgrade”, the newspaper reported. It would be a violation of the Geneva Convention, which regulates the humane treatment to be given to soldiers captured in a military conflict, through which the right to honor and respect for such persons prevails.
Source: El Diario

I’m Wayne Wickman, a professional journalist and author for Today Times Live. My specialty is covering global news and current events, offering readers a unique perspective on the world’s most pressing issues. I’m passionate about storytelling and helping people stay informed on the goings-on of our planet.