“A soldier poisoned by gas, Zoryan, his nom de guerre “Dyed” (grandfather), 49 years old, describes an attack in December 2023 near Tchassiv Yar. “A Russian drone first dropped a simple grenade to dig a hole in the fortified shelter and, a few minutes later, a second grenade with the gas. I didn't have time to put on my mask. The gas was visible, white, and the smell reminded me of garlic. I was having trouble breathing, with a burning sensation in my lungs, and I was vomiting. I had tears in my eyes and could barely see anything. »" After his evacuation in chaotic conditions, As Russian drones continued to strike his unit and several soldiers were killed, Zoryan spent two weeks in a hospital, where his blood and urine were taken for analysis. The burning sensation subsided within a few days, but a month later he is still taking medication and “can’t see as well as before.”
---has been hit “three times a month since November [2023]". On the #Zaporizhia front, in the south, a military rescuer says her unit faced “gas attacks almost every day in November and December,” with many injured, including “one soldier [who] permanently lost his sight, his eyes burned.” Then, as they continue to increase in recent weeks elsewhere on the front, gas attacks decreased in January in her area, “probably because the Russian units here have already sent everything they had at their disposal,” she quips.”
#Ukraine
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Sébastien Lebret
@SbastienLebret8
The ruZZes use toxic gas on the front.🤬
“Testimonies on the use of gas are increasing along the front line. On the front line of #Avdiïvka, in the east of the country, a military doctor says that his battalion
---ALT