Horror vid shows countless coffins of Putin’s war dead with body count so high they fly on world’s largest military jet

Horror vid shows countless coffins of Putin’s war dead with body count so high they fly on world’s largest military jet

RARE footage shows countless coffins of Vladimir Putin’s dead fighters stacked on top of each other, ready to be taken to families.

The stark video was filmed at a yard in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, nearly two years into the full-scale war in Ukraine.

East2WestDozens of new coffins with slain Russian men are filmed in Rostov-on-Don, south of Russia, by Russia’s border with Ukraine[/caption]

East2WestIt is illegal under Putin’s laws to show such imagery in case people question his decision to launch the war[/caption]

East2WestCoffins are unloaded from a Ruslan An-124 plane in Neryungri[/caption]

It is understood the corpses of Putin’s soldiers are collected for transport back to relatives across Russia‘s 11 time zones, and that Ruslan An-124 planes – the world’s largest military jets – are used to deliver coffins to Siberia.

Video of the wooden boxes was discreetly filmed by a Russian military man.

It is illegal under Putin’s dictatorship to show the reality of his war in Ukraine in such a way.

New laws introduced after the catastrophic invasion of Ukraine make it illegal to “discredit” Russian armed forces or distribute “false information” about the war, regardless of whether it is accurate.

Prominent independent journalist Alexander Nevzorov called attention to the macabre sight of the coffins airlift while claiming Putin will attempt to secure a victory in Avdiivka, a war-blitzed city in Donetsk region, by any means necessary.

He said: “The approaches to Avdiivka have long become a huge mass grave of [Putin’s fighters].

“But now the Russians are covering the area with a new carpet of their corpses.”

Ukraine is reported to have pushed back and prevented the largest number of Russian attacks on the Avdiivka front in 24 hours: 30, with a total of 66 combat engagements.

Mr Nevzorov said there was no military reason Putin wanted to “liberate” the city, stating: “At all polling stations, ballot boxes must bow before the crazy king of corpses…

“The fights are crazy.

“Orcs [Russian fighters] climb over the corpses of their comrades, ‘forward to the victory of Putinism’.”

In separate footage, the booming voice of a man last month claimed an An-124 Ruslan plane, which is designed for heavy loads, had arrived at Neryungri Airport filled with the bodies of dead soldiers.

He said: “They are all our boys from Yakutsk, 26 men.

“We’ve loaded two trucks, mine and Tolik’s. Sixteen other bodies have already been taken.

“And another nine [coffins] were loaded into a Kamaz truck.

“We are now to transport [the coffins] to the railway to load the boys into train carriages.”

A wooden coffin could be seen travelling by conveyor belt from the belly of the plane to the tray of a truck as the man spoke.

There are so many corpses that it has lost all meaning

Alexander Nevzorovindependent journalist

Two other vehicles carrying coffins sat parked to the right of the aircraft as men wearing coats and large winter caps watched on.

Neryungri, a remote town of 60,000 people in the world’s coldest inhabited region, Yakutia, is seven time zones east of the war zone.

Putin is estimated to have lost more than 300,000 troops since he declared war in February 2022.

Mr Nevzorov added that while there were “countless” corpses in the Rostov-on-Don yard, featured in the video, “three-quarters of the Russian dead remain in the fields and amid the ruins”.

He said: “The counting of losses has stopped.

“There are so many corpses that it has lost all meaning.”

Designed in the 1980s, the Ruslan An-124 is the largest military plane in the world

East2WestThe rare footage of the coffins was filmed surreptitiously by a Russian military man[/caption]

East2WestCoffins are stacked on top of each other in trucks as more are unloaded from the plane[/caption]

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