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Russian saboteurs ‘infiltrating bomb shelters and hiding weapons in kids’ toys’

Russian Saboteurs and weapons in toys
Over a dozen bullets were discovered in a teddy bear at a metro station in Kyiv (Picture: National Police of Ukraine)

Kyiv residents have described living in fear of Russian saboteurs who are infiltrating bomb shelters and hiding weapons in children’s toys.

Shocking footage shared by the National Police of Ukraine shows over a dozen bullets being pulled out of a teddy bear at a metro station in the capital city.

Officers made the discovery after five men were arrested for acting suspiciously in a subway where residents were seeking cover from Russian bombing.

During a thorough search of the items, police found a toy on one of the saboteurs, in which ammunition was hidden. His friend, a Belarusian citizen, also had ammunition with him, according to local media.

For the latest updates on the Russia-Ukraine war, visit our live blog: Russia-Ukraine live

Kyiv resident Karolina Stolozh, 21, said saboteurs are hiding the weapons in toys ‘so they can shoot people in shelters’.

For the latest updates on the Russia-Ukraine war, visit our live blog: Russia-Ukraine live

She told Metro.co.uk: ‘We use our metro as a shelter, there are a lot of people hiding there with kids. There are a lot of Russian saboteurs here who came a couple of weeks before the war, and they do crazy stuff like this.’

Officials in Sumy, northern Ukraine, have also claimed that Russian sabotage groups are hiding weapons in toys, mobile phones and other valuable objects. The military administration warned residents on Facebook not to touch valuable objects lying around and to report anything suspicious.

Karolina, who was been hiding from bombs in an underground car park with her mother, said: ‘It’s really dangerous to hide in the bomb shelters because saboteurs change from their Russian military uniform into the Ukrainian uniform and try to sneak into the shelter with a gun in order to scare people.

‘We have people on duty who stay near the door all night and check everyone who is trying to go inside our shelter.

‘There are also a lot of cases when Russians stop cars in order to steal them from civil citizens and they just kill them, with kids and animals.’

Russian saboteurs infiltrating shelters and 'putting weapons in kids toys'
Five men suspected to be part of Russian sabotage groups were arrested at a station in Kyiv yesterday
Russian saboteurs infiltrating shelters and 'putting weapons in kids toys'
During the search, the National Police of Ukraine found a stuffed animal with 16 bullets inside
Russian saboteurs infiltrating shelters and 'putting weapons in kids toys'
Karolina has been sleeping in an underground car park to shelter from Russian bombs

There was international outrage over the case of Polina, a ten-year-old girl killed when her family car came under fire from a Russian sabotage group in Kyiv.

Her brother, five-year-old Semyon, is said to be fighting for life after he was rushed to hospital alongside elder sister Sofia when the vehicle was hit by a hail of bullets as they tried to flee the city on Saturday.

Parents Anton Kudrin and Svetlana Zapadynskaya, who were both vets, died instantly alongside middle daughter Polina.

Karolina said this was not an isolated incident and there had been similar reports on Ukrainian social media.

In one Instagram post, which Metro.co.uk has not been able to verify, a woman claims her friend’s family was shot at on the Zhytomyr highway, killing a young mother and severely wounding her two children.

Polina was in a car her parents. A ???? reconnaissance group killed them all. Little Polina was in the final year of primary school in Kyiv. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-60547807
Polina, 10, was killed by Russian saboteurs who targeted her family’s car as they fled Kyiv (Picture: BBC News)
Semyon Kudrin
Her little brother Semyon, who was rushed to hospital, has also reportedly died (Picture: Facebook / Anton Kudrin)

Karolina said: ‘Seeing those [posts] breaks my heart, because a lot of innocent people are dying everyday.’

Authorities in Kyiv have introduced a curfew from 8pm to 7am to protect citzens from Russian shelling and sabotage groups.

But even during the day Karolina said she does not got outside because it’s too dangerous.

A chilling video taken by her neighbour shows what she believes is a saboteur scaling the walls of her building in an attempt to break in.

Describing daily life in her besieged city she said: ‘We are so tired of this. We come back home after the night in shelter at around 5-6 am and [try to] get more sleep at home.

‘We sleep on the floor in case of the explosions if windows blow up and with clothes on in case of an emergency to get ready faster and run away.

Saboteurs scale buildings
Karolina said Russian saboteurs are also breaking into apartments in Kyiv
Russian saboteurs infiltrating shelters and 'putting weapons in kids toys'
Residents patrol the entrance to her shelter to stop Russians infiltrating

‘We don’t turn on the light in the apartment because saboteurs look in the windows to see if someone is at home. They try to sneak into the apartments to steal stuff.

‘We don’t go outside, its really dangerous because of the Russian saboteurs and we have a curfew from 8pm to 7am.’

Karolina said she is surviving off the kindness of volunteers who have been risking their lives to give free water, bread, food and medicine to people hiding in shelters.

There have been reports of food shortages in many areas under siege, with Kyiv’s ambassador to the UK warning this week that Russian President Vladimir Putin may be seeking to starve cities to crush Ukraine’s resolve.

The mayor of Mariupol – a strategic southern port city – says Russian troops have cut off electricity, water, food and heating.

And the Mayor of Kherson, which Moscow claims to have captured, warned yesterday that ‘people will perish’ without humanitarian corridors for food and medicine to be delivered safely.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by MARCUS YAM/LOS ANGELES TIMES/REX/Shutterstock (12830712c) Anastasia Vakulenko, left, consoles Natalya Chikonova, right, as she breaks down talking about her worries and the war that is raging above ground, while they seek shelter underground in a subway station on the seventh day of the Russian invasion, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, March 2, 2022. (MARCUS YAM / LOS ANGELES TIMES) UKRAINE RUSSIA CRISIS, Kyiv, Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine - 02 Mar 2022
People in Kyiv have been seeking shelter from Russian bombs in underground subway stations (Picture: Rex)
KYIV, UKRAINE -MARCH 2: Newborn babies and pregnant women are seen on makeshift beds in basement floor of a maternity hospital converted to medical ward and used as a shelter amid Russian attacks in Kyiv, Ukraine on March 2, 2022. (Photo by Aytac Unal/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Newborn babies and pregnant women are seen on makeshift beds in basement floor of a maternity hospital converted to medical ward and used as a shelter (Picture: Getty)
A woman holds her child as she tries to board into a free train to Poland at a train station in Lviv, western Ukraine, on March 3, 2022. - Russian forces have taken over the Ukrainian city of Kherson, local officials confirmed March 2, 2022 the first major urban centre to fall since Moscow invaded a week ago. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images)
A woman holds her child as she tries to board into a free train to Poland at a train station in Lviv, western Ukraine (Picture: AFP)

A spokesperson for the International Red Cross, Matthew Morris, told Metro.co.uk that the humanitarian needs of the people ‘are huge and getting worse everyday’.

He said: ‘There are gas and water shortages across the country. Supply pipelines are blocked.

‘We are seeing a big need for insulin. We are preparing supplies and hope to be able to fill these needs.

‘The situation in Mariupol is deteriorating. We are preparing additional medical supplies to send to Kyiv as security allows.

‘We are receiving a flood of calls from people desperate for safety. People are sheltering underground, often for hours on end, and are not able to go outside for fear of shelling.

Firefighters work to extinguish a fire at a damaged logistic center after shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, Thursday, March 3, 2022. Russian forces have escalated their attacks on crowded cities in what Ukraine's leader called a blatant campaign of terror. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)
Firefighters work to extinguish a fire at a damaged logistic center after shelling in Kyiv (Picture: AP)
This grab made from a handout video released by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, shows a damaged apartment building which is said was hit by shelling in Chernihiv on March 3, 2022. - Nine people died and four were injured after Russian forces hit residential areas, including schools, in the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, the local governor said on March 3. (Photo by Handout / UKRAINE EMERGENCY MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT
A damaged apartment building which was hit by shelling in Chernihiv (Picture: AFP)
This grab made from a handout video released by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, shows a damaged apartment building which is said was hit by shelling in Chernihiv on March 3, 2022. - Nine people died and four were injured after Russian forces hit residential areas, including schools, in the northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv, the local governor said on March 3. (Photo by Handout / UKRAINE EMERGENCY MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT
Charities warn the humanitarian situation is getting worse by the day (Picture: AFP)

‘Many Ukrainians have no water, electricity, and minimal phone connectivity. Food and necessities are hard to find.

‘We have heard from people who were wounded and are looking for assistance, including people who feel in great psychological distress.’

The ICRC called for parties to the conflict to ‘fulfil their legal obligations and uphold international humanitarian law’.

‘The parties must spare the civilian population from military operations and should immediately allow safe passage for people fleeing the fighting,’ he said.

‘Additionally, humanitarian organizations must be able to safely bring in clean water, food and medical care, and to reunite separated families. Parties must facilitate humanitarian work.’

The UN estimates that one million people have fled Ukraine for neighbouring countries already.

But it is thought the war could create up to four million refugees as the crisis intensifies.

Vladimir Putin told French President Emanuel Macron today that the ‘worst is yet to come’ and he wants to control all of Ukraine. The Russian leader has ramped up aggression after reportedly being left furious by slow progress thanks to Ukraine’s fierce resistance.

Ukrainian forces are currently battling Russian troops for control of Enerhodar – the home of Europe’s largest nuclear plant.

Residents in the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol have also desperately tried to survive a barrage of Russian shelling today.

And unverified footage is said to show the world’s biggest plane on fire after Russian forces attacked Kyiv for a seventh day.

The West is expected to announce more sanctions this week after Russia’s credit rating was downgraded to junk – though Nato is continuing to rule out a no fly zone.

Meanwhile, an appeal is being launched by the UK’s Disasters Emergency Committee to help the hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing the conflict as well as residents stuck in Ukraine. All public donations will be doubled by the UK government, up to a total of £20m.



from News – Metro https://ift.tt/uQlNvVi

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