A rather tragicomic scandal arose among the occupiers in Sevastopol regarding the “allocation of plots” for “veterans” of the aggressor on abandoned lands near the villages of Orlovka and Polyushko, which we have previously described.
Now the fact is that, as it “suddenly turned out”, on the “allocated” land there was built a “brotherly cemetery”, demolished back in the 1970s, where the remains of 296 soldiers of the 387th division who died during the liberation of the Northern side of Sevastopol found an eternal refuge.
Now the criminal “head of the DOSAAF search association” “Crimea-Sevastopol-Search” Andrei Mogila reported about the “sudden discovery of the graves of fighters.”
Naturally, such a “sudden” discovery of burials and its discussion in the “media” aggressor-controlled, despite the obvious propaganda “inconvenience of the plot,” occurred for a very simple reason: in Sevastopol, even the inconveniences at Polyushko, the worst lands on the territory of the city council, are too valuable for the occupiers to give them to “new veterans”, and not for multi-apartment development for the Russian colonialists.