More than 150 dead in containers: Russians report large bodies found in Azovstal plant

The long-besieged Azovstal steel mill is completely destroyed by Russian troops.

More than 150 dead in containers: Russians report large bodies found in Azovstal plant

The long-besieged Azovstal steel mill is completely destroyed by Russian troops. After the capitulation of the Ukrainian soldiers, the besiegers say they made a gruesome discovery. Dozens of fallen soldiers are said to have been stowed in a container and mines placed underneath.

According to the Russian military, more than 150 bodies of Ukrainian fighters have been found in the underground bunkers of the Azovstal factory, which has been the subject of months of fighting. "152 bodies of fallen fighters and soldiers of the Ukrainian armed forces were stored in a container with no longer working cooling," said the spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, Igor Konashenkov, in Moscow.

To date, the Ukrainian leadership has not made any request to transfer the dead. On the contrary, the Russian troops discovered mines under the corpses, with which the container was probably supposed to be blown up on instructions from Kiev in order to blacken Russia, Konashenkov claimed. Russia will soon hand over the dead to representatives of Ukraine, he said.

The port city of Mariupol in southern Ukraine was surrounded by Russian troops in the first days of the war. As a result of the fighting, the city, which was home to 440,000 people before the war, was almost completely destroyed. After heavy rearguard action, the Ukrainian defenders, some of whom belonged to the Azov regiment, finally entrenched themselves in the Azovstal steel works before the last soldiers there surrendered in mid-May.

The pro-Russian separatists now want to put them on trial. They also threatened to impose the death penalty on the fighters on charges of war crimes. Among the detainees are soldiers from the Azov regiment, which the separatists consider a terrorist organization. Russia's Supreme Court has yet to decide whether to classify the group as a terrorist organization. Up to 20 years in prison for membership alone.