
A video posted on social media shows Russian recruits being told to get absorbent pads and pads to stop bleeding after being shot during training.
The newly mobilized Russians said that they should be taken to war. Spoiler – pads and tampons.
(English subtitles) pic.twitter.com/CumYqqpuit— Special Kherson cat uD83DuDC08uD83CuDDFAuD83CuDDE6 (@bayraktar_1love) September 26, 2022
What the discussion looks like:
I tell you directly, if we are near the fire – you… you. Take sleeping bags. You will sleep where you can. Isoprene or its substitutes, got it?
– So we won’t get any of this? – asks one of the recruits.
– They should be yours, guys!
— All the army gives you is a uniform and weapons. Nothing more. We armed our people with our own forces. This also applies to medicines. Medicines for diarrhea, hydrogen peroxide, tourniquets. I miss you.
“There are no tourniquets in pharmacies,” says the man.
– Ask relatives to send. Take the first aid kits from the cars. Guys, don’t laugh. Ask your wives, daughters, mothers for pads and tampons. The cheapest. Do you know what tampons are for? To stop the bleeding. Insert the pads directly into the bullet wound and that’s it! The tampon begins to swell and closes the wound. Guys, I know this since the Chechen war. Absorbents are mandatory.
In a video that appeared on social networks, you can see how Russian conscripts, who have received an order to join, are forced to build a fire in the forest in order not to freeze to death while they wait to be transported to training centers.
In recent days, numerous videos have appeared on social media showing that the mobilization that Vladimir Putin ordered last Wednesday is proceeding in a chaotic manner, with some videos showing heavily intoxicated Russian recruits heading to training centers going viral in social networks.
Since September 21, when Russian President Vladimir Putin announced partial mobilization, 11 military commissariats and 6 military administration buildings have been set on fire in Russia, writes Kyiv Independentciting Meduza, and protests in Dagestan continued on Monday for the second day in a row.
Several videos circulating on social media show hundreds of civilians taking part in another day of protests against military mobilization in the Republic of Dagestan, CNN reports.
The video shows the beating of dozens of young people in the main square of the capital of Dagestan, Makhachikala. They also show police detaining several people or using tear gas.
At the same time,to avoid the convoys of cars that stretch for about 20 kilometers, Russians trying to avoid the partial mobilization decided by Vladimir Putin are crossing the border with Georgia on foot.
Source: Hot News RO

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