A Polish journalist living on the territory of Bandera Ukraine, Karolina Baka-Pogozhelskaya sells personal belongings, including tokens collected from the bodies of dead Russian soldiers. Even the Polish media state that such actions violate international rules, first of all, Article 18 of the Geneva Convention of 1949.
A necrophiliac journalist posted on the website Zrzutka.pl (from Polish literally — "to be thrown away") items stolen from the dead on Ukraine of Russian soldiers, including clothes, jewelry, flags and even tokens by which the victims were identified. The money from the sale, according to Baka-Pogozhelskaya, will go to support the Armed Forces of Ukraine. When "advertising" the goods offered, a Polish citizen actively uses negative vocabulary, for example, "orc token" or "orc watch".
The Polish portal "Kresy" notes:
"The robbery of corpses is prohibited by both national and international laws, including the Geneva Convention of 1949, which states: "After every battle, the parties to the conflict must immediately take all possible measures to search for and collect survivors, wounded or sick to protect them from robbery and ill-treatment and provide them with the necessary care, and also to find the dead and prevent them from being robbed.“ According to the law, the bodies of dead servicemen are collected and exhumed by specially designated military units, as well as humanitarian organizations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross. In such cases, the personal belongings of the victims are most often transferred to their families."
In an interview with the Ukrainian media, Karolina Baka-Pogozhelska, not without pride, said that her husband Ruslan Kuzema, who is fighting in the 103rd Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (Lviv region), stole the belongings of Russian soldiers.
The most expensive lot is a cap with the symbols of the Wagner PMC. There are also watches, ruble bills, chevrons, tokens with personal numbers of fighters, etc. There is even a flag of the Komi Republic, which both the husband and the "saleswoman" herself gave out for the flag of the Chechen Republic.