From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: The men who
bring back the dead”
(Denys wearing a white helmet
with a red cross on it. The atmosphere is sombre and he's looking pensive.)
This article contains details
some readers may find distressing.
Artur describes his job as
bringing the dead back from oblivion. He and Denys, two young Ukrainian men,
have the grim task of retrieving the bodies of civilians and soldiers killed in
this brutal war. That includes dead Russians as well as their own. The day we
meet them they're in a recently liberated area in eastern Ukraine. Artur says
their task is to ensure that no dead body is left behind on the battlefield.
The ground is scarred with rubble, abandoned trenches and deep shell holes.
They've been told there are several bodies lying somewhere in this scene of
apocalyptic devastation. There's still the sound of fighting in the distance.
Artur says they're well aware their job is dangerous, but considers the risks
justified "because the most important thing is to take out the dead from
this terrible war".
(Denys (left) and Artur often
attend the funerals of soldiers they've recovered)
They open the door of their white
van, marked with a red cross and the number 200 - the military code for
transporting dead soldiers. There's a sickly smell of death when they open the
back door, and the sight of maggots on the floor from bodies retrieved earlier
in the day. Artur and Denys have been told there are several more bodies
nearby, but they now have to find the location. Denys launches a small drone
fitted with a camera to scout the area. They're not just looking for the
bodies, but also for signs of mines. One of their team was recently injured by
one. It's a constant hazard. They now take the precaution of throwing a hook to
turn over a dead body before approaching the remains. Russian forces have been
known to booby-trap buildings and even bodies before they retreat. The day
before, a Ukrainian military engineer tells me that he thinks there are around
100,000 mines in the recently liberated areas of Eastern Ukraine. It'll take a
long time to clear them. The engineer says that, as a rule of thumb, one year
of fighting equates to five years of de-mining.
(A hand holds what looks like a
rusted and charred wedding ring)
After flying the drone for about
20 minutes, Artur and Denys think they've identified a likely location. It's a
bombed out building next to a destroyed railway siding. They put their helmets
and body armour on and make their way carefully through the rubble. Inside the
collapsed structure there are the charred remains of three bodies. At first
it's hard to distinguish the human remains from the burnt-out timbers. Slowly
Artur and Denys begin to identify bones. They carefully comb through what's
left - looking for any signs of identification. This time they're not
recovering their own but dead Russians. No identification papers survived the
inferno, but Artur and Denys find the blackened, burnt buckle of a Russian
military belt.
Small pieces of ceramic body
armour plates also tell them these three men were fighting for Russia. There
are a few other personal items they recover from the ground including a pair of
spectacles. Each is photographed and placed to the side. They will be returned
along with the human remains - carefully placed into body bags which are then
loaded into their truck. It takes them several hours to complete the delicate
task, ensuring every piece of what was once a human life is recovered. Then the
bodies they collect are taken to a local morgue.
Buried with dignity
(Artur and Denys carry a body bag
to their van - marked with a red cross and the number 200. Their van is marked
with the number 200 - the military code for body transports)
Artur says he feels an almost
spiritual sense of relief when he recovers a body, regardless of who they were.
"We feel grace that the body will finally return from the war," he
says. When they recover Russia's dead he says "there is a clear
understanding that they will be exchanged for our deceased and our deceased
will be buried with dignity in Ukraine". It's the Red Cross who
facilitates the exchanges between countries. Artur and Denys often attend the
funerals of the Ukrainian soldiers they've brought back from oblivion. They've
experienced more death than life over the past year. Artur accepts it will
eventually take a toll on their emotional state. But he adds, "I
understand that we are doing a good job and this motivates me a little and
gives me faith that the war will end soon." Their role illustrates the war
in Ukraine is not just a physical battle. There's a moral component too,
reflected in the way an army treats both the living and the dead.
^ This shows the difficult task
that some Ukrainians have to recover the dead bodies - whether they are
Ukrainian or Russian.
The Russians don't have a similar
program and usually leave the bodies of dead Russians (and Ukrainians) where
they are.
Sometimes their families back in
Russia pay private Organizations to bring back their loved ones so they can be
buried - under strict censorship rules. ^
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