Occupiers refuse rations because they love eating Ukrainian dogs


Russian commanders sell rations to their soldiers, so they continue to eat dogs.
This is evidenced by new telephone conversations of the invaders, intercepted by the SBU.
On one of the recordings, the occupier complains to his wife: “There, the cans were brought: some kind of snack, carrots, cabbage ... We immediately threw tруь away. It's full of crap, like for pigs."
He adds that their rations go "to the left", and the commanders who resell them are to blame.
On the second recording, another occupant asks his mother to guess what he ate. The woman first names the exotic variant with badgers, and then moves on to mice and rats.
"Dog! Meat hunting!” - answers the Russian occupier.
Apparently, eating pets has become a trend among the invaders.
- Why migration policy in Ukraine is becoming a matter of rebuilding the country
- Pro-Russian march with St. George ribbons and Night Wolves allowed in Vienna
- Will Ukrainians return home after the war?
- “Want extra pay? Go to the trenches." Why Ukrainian medical staff in frontline areas are not receiving the promised payments
- The loss of the middle class: what a new study on Ukrainian refugees showed
- Thousands of people will be able to receive assistance: how the law for Ukrainian critical infrastructure workers was changed
Maria Grynevych, project manager, journalist, co-author of Guidebook Sacred Mountains of the Dnieper Region, Lecture Course: Cult Topography of the Middle Dnieper Region.













