Activist protest anti-massacre in the Ukrainian city of Bukha took place even in Moscow.
The photos appear to have been taken outside the Church of the Savior Christ and near the Kremlin. An unidentified activist appears in all of them, tied to a pole and a hood, referring to one of the iconic photos of corpses on the streets that caused international outrage, although Moscow insists on talking about provocations.
Days after the withdrawal of Russian troops from the city, the Ukrainians were still finding dead in the yards and on the streets, transmit from Bukha to New York Times journalists Carlotta Gall and Andrew Kramer.
Some of the people were found face down, or curled up, beaten while riding bicycles or while walking on the street or in the basements of houses.
In the precinct of the church of Agios Andreas, in Bouka, one of the greatest atrocities of the 21st century is recorded. The Russians executed hundreds of Ukrainians and buried them en masse in an area of a few tens of meters.
The atrocity that took place in the Ukrainian city was recorded by SKAI with their envoys Elli Kasolis and Stergios Tsifoutis.
The horror of the Russian invasion has no limit as, as the report shows, lifeless bodies are lying in the middle of the streets. ‘
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