The resistance to the invasion stays strong. According to Ukraine’s intelligence service, citizens have started making poisoned cakes and distributing them to Russian soldiers as the invasion enters its fifth week.
The poisoning of Russian soldiers by Ukrainians in Kharkiv has resulted in the deaths of two and the sickening of many more.
On Saturday, Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate said that people in Izium had served the soldiers from the 3rd Motor Rifle Division delicacies from their city.
A total of 28 intruders were taken to the hospital and another two were murdered as a result.
It was not known how the troops at the hospital were doing.
A new round of alcohol-related hospitalizations for Russian troops in Ukraine brought the report to light. Whether the Russian military was able to collect the booze from Ukrainian residents is a matter of speculation.
The occurrences have been written off as “non-combat casualties” by Russia, according to Ukrainian officials.
In other news, Russia bombed Ukrainian cities Kharkiv and Odesa on Sunday.
Over the previous 24 hours, the regional governor of Kharkiv, Oleh Synyehubov, said Russian soldiers had carried out more than 20 attacks on the city and its suburbs.
Kosovo was hit by a missile attack and a hospital in Balakliia was bombed, according to Synyehubov.
A Russian attack on the southern Ukrainian port of Odesa occurred early on Sunday morning. Targets included an oil processing facility and gasoline storage near Odesa, which is Russia’s most important port and home to its navy, the Russian military said.
As Russian soldiers left Kyiv and its outskirts, officials in the Ukrainian city of Bucha stated they discovered the brutally murdered remains of women, children, and local leaders. Ukraine said that the ladies had been raped and burned on fire before being transported.
An advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said, “There are killed victims whose remains bore evidence of torture.” Oleksiy Arestovych. “They were shot at the back of the head while their hands were bound.”
Zelensky’s spokesman, Sergey Nikiforov, told the BBC that the finds looked “absolutely like war crimes.”
This “special military operation,” which the Kremlin refers to as a “war crimes investigation,” was previously rejected by the Kremlin.
Ukraine has cautioned that this does not guarantee the cities would not be targeted again, while the United States and its allies anticipated the move might merely signify Putin is regrouping after Russia vowed last week to “radically” cut its assaults surrounding Kyiv and Chernihiv.
The country has faced devastating losses and they are desperate to put an end to this war and arise as victors for the sake of the well-being of their countrymen. Their continued battle against the invasion is said to be resourceful and awe-inspiring, despite the losses of both parties, this stunt is considered to be a small triumph for justice.