Ukraine Released Crazy Before And After Images Of A Soldier Frees From Russian Captivity. The Images Are Depressing!
- 1:06 am September 29, 2022
- suhas
Images of a Ukrainian soldier who spent months in Russian custody reveal him to be very malnourished, and physicians are unable to provide him with the care he need.
Damage caused by the war
War's collateral harm is tragic. The battle images reveal the reality of the destruction perpetrated, from schools being demolished to individuals being slaughtered cruelly.
How Ukrainian soldiers are been treated
Kyiv expressed outrage at Russia's treatment of a recently released Ukrainian prisoner of war to show how Moscow treats Ukrainian soldiers in captivity (POW). As a result, Kyiv was forced to show the soldier's "before and after photos."
What happened to this soldier
Dianov was one of 2,000 men dispatched to Mariupol to reclaim the Azovstal steel mill from Russia, but they were beaten and captured in the middle of May.
Left: Ukrainian marine Mykhailo Dianov inside the Azovstal steel plant during the siege of Mariupol in May.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) September 23, 2022
Right: Dianov in a Kyiv hospital after his release from Russian captivity in late September.
📷 Olena Lavrushko/Dmytro 'Orest' Kozatskyi pic.twitter.com/C681jJPOxj
Comparison photos
Photos uploaded on Twitter show how skinny he has become. Dianov's photograph after his release was compared to one taken in May, in which the soldier was captured triumphantly smiling.
Hey, people, do you remember this guy Mykhailo Dianov from the Azovstal?
— Illia Ponomarenko🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) September 23, 2022
He’s free from Russian captivity now, but he needs to heal his arm.
Let’s donate to help the soldier — his sister Olena has a PayPal account for international donations: [email protected]
I’m donating! pic.twitter.com/ZaVx0JyxWZ
His injuries
According to Anton Gerashchenko, a Ukrainian foreign ministry advisor, the soldier's one arm was missing four millimetres of bone.
This fundraiser was organized by the daughter of Mykhailo Dianov for his treatment and rehabilitation.https://t.co/IULh7YKb0j pic.twitter.com/j6I0eK25Nx
— Iryna Voichuk🇺🇦 (@irmachep) September 23, 2022
According to Oleksandra Matviichuk, director of the Center for Civil Liberties, the Geneva Conventions demand that prisoners of war be treated humanely (Ukraine). Russia's war on Ukraine has resulted in countless deaths.
