It is a permanent air search that weighs civilians in the city of Kherson in southern Ukraine. For six months, Russian drones have broken in the city of the city and track all who dare to survey an area that is now deserted, without distinction.
BFMTV investigated which facilities cynically call “Kherson’s human safari”, having left at least 120 dead in civilians and more than 1,000 injured according to local authorities. Attacks that are similar to war crimes perpetrated by the Russian army.
“They want to terrorize us”
Oleksandr, one of the victims of these air attacks, speaks his arm in plaster, after being “drilled by explosions” in one of these attacks. “Come cars or civilians and simply attack. They want to terrorize us,” he says.
In the hospital, stories overlap and seem the same. “The majority of the injured civilians brought here were attacked by these drones while waiting for the bus, or on the street. They receive many shrapnel shrapnel,” Svetlana shares, a doctor from the city of southern Ukraine.
Genady, a building worker, was attacked while he was busy repairing the roof of a building. “We saw it at the last moment, he appeared out of nowhere, without a noise. I turned and I saw him hurry over us, it happened in a second, I could not do anything,” deplores the wounded worker.
Civil who serve as training?
Concerned residents have fled. Others live in home. The authorities encourage rare people who dare to take the way by car quickly and change their career to interrupt drones.
Ernest, a taxi driver, says he had to invest in a drone detector to be able to “hide” quickly when he is hunting. His intimate condemnation: the search for civilians is a training of Russian soldiers for the use of drones, before going to the front line.
“They have many new drones pilots and have to be trained somewhere. Kherson for them, it is perfect, we are separated by a river and our soldiers cannot go to attack them on the other side,” Ernest said.
Would it be right? Russian soldiers deliver videos of their crimes in telegram loops. In the eyes of international law, attacks aimed at civilians are considered war crimes.
Source: BFM TV
