logo
Cannibal Russian soldier 'ATE his dead comrade and lived off his remains for two weeks' on frontline, phone call intercepted by Ukrainian spies reveal

Cannibal Russian soldier 'ATE his dead comrade and lived off his remains for two weeks' on frontline, phone call intercepted by Ukrainian spies reveal

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

A Russian soldier fighting on the frontlines of Ukraine killed his colleague and lived off his remains for two weeks, Ukraine's military intelligence directorate (HUR) has claimed.
HUR released what it said was an intercepted call between two of Vladimir Putin 's troops in which they were heard discussing an alleged case of cannibalism among the ranks.
One soldier was heard telling his stunned comrade in an expletive-laden rant how a soldier nicknamed Brelok - or 'keychain' - killed his fellow infantryman 'Foma' and began eating him.
'F***ing hell... Brelok f***ing ate him, f*** me... nobody went anywhere. Brelok whacked him and then ate him for f***ing two weeks,' the first caller says.
'No f***ing way… holy sh*t… f*** my bald skull. Was Brelok really found as a 200?' the other responds.
The term 200 refers to someone who is found killed in action.
'Yeah, they say he was a 200. He ate his comrade. So yeah… something to think about. I was shocked myself,' the first caller concluded.
Ukraine's HUR has intermittently shared snippets of phone calls it says are genuine interceptions of Russian communications since the full-scale invasion in February 2022, though there is no way to verify whether they are genuine.
But several Russian units engaged in frontline combat in Ukraine are made up of hardened criminals who agreed to sign up for the so-called 'special military operation' in exchange for a commutation of their sentences.
In May 2024, it emerged that a convicted cannibal and a murderer-rapist were among the men freed by the Russian defence ministry before heading to the frontlines.
Dmitry Malyshev, 36, was jailed after frying the heart of one of three men he killed.
He was hit with a 25-year sentence for 'murder of two people with particular cruelty as part of a criminal gang, banditry, theft and illegal trafficking of weapons and ammunition, preparation for the murder of police officers, robbery and eating the heart of the last victim', Russian media reported.
Meanwhile, rapist and killer Alexander Maslennikov, 38, used an axe and a meat grinder to cut up and mince the bodies of two women he invited to his flat for a pizza, before 'feeding human flesh to the dogs'.
The pair were pictured grinning together in military fatigues after being freed from jail in late 2023.
Sickening rapist and killer Alexander Maslennikov, 38, used an axe and a meat grinder to cut up and mince the bodies of two women he invited to his flat
Malyshev told Russia's V1 outlet that he and Maslennikov wanted 'to preserve the traditional values of Russia' in fighting for Putin.
'Alexander and I were serving sentences together and we both signed contracts with the Ministry of Defence in October 2023.'
In his confession, Malyshev - pardoned and released 17 years early by Russian courts in coordination with the Defence Ministry - told police about his cannibalism.
'I caught up with a man there, and killed him.
'I hit him several times in the head with a nail gun and cut out his heart,' he said, adding that he took the heart home.
In a crime reconstruction, he said: 'I reached in with my hand and pulled out the heart… I sliced it here, the heart's on the table, I just sliced it. Then I put it in a frying pan and started frying it… Then I ate it.
'Well, well, well, we're frying human flesh. Here we have a heart.'
He said he 'added the onions and the seasoning… Now I'm gonna stir it in. It's going to be ******* awesome.'
Maslennikov, a convicted rapist, was jailed for 23 years for double murder, but released from jail by Putin 18-and-a-half years early
Maslennikov, a convicted rapist, was jailed for 23 years for double murder, but released from jail by Putin 18-and-a-half years early.
He killed two sales assistants, Daria Labutina, 29, and Olga Shaposhnikova, 28, after meeting them at a karaoke bar and inviting them to his flat for pizza.
He testified that he had sex with Daria - and then killed her in the bathroom.
Maslennikov then went to eat pizza and smoke with Olga, who was initially unaware her friend had been murdered.
After she refused to have sex with him, he tied her up and gagged her - smoking and drinking next to her as she pleaded in vain for her life.
Forensic evidence showed Olga died from strangulation. Maslennikov stabbed her repeatedly after death.
He then went to buy an axe, file, spade, and plastic bin bags.
Prosecutors told the court the DNA of both women was found on a meat grinder in his kitchen.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Putin says no need for OPEC+ to intervene in oil market due to Iran-Israel conflict
Putin says no need for OPEC+ to intervene in oil market due to Iran-Israel conflict

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Putin says no need for OPEC+ to intervene in oil market due to Iran-Israel conflict

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, June 20 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that oil prices had not risen significantly due to the conflict between Iran and Israel, and that there was no need for the OPEC+ group of oil producers to intervene in oil markets. Oil prices have rallied as a week-old air war between Israel and Iran escalated and uncertainty about potential U.S. involvement kept investors on edge, with Brent crude futures touching their highest since late January. Putin said the price of oil now stands at around $75 per barrel, while before the conflict escalated it stood at $65. "Of course, we see that the current situation in the Middle East, the current situation related to the conflict between Iran and Israel, has led to a certain increase in prices. But this increase, in the opinion of our experts, is not significant," Putin told the St Petersburg Economic Forum. Iran is the third largest producer among members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. Hostilities could disrupt its supply of oil and thereby increase prices. Putin also said OPEC and allies including Russia - a group known as OPEC+, which pumps about half of the world's oil - were increasing oil output, but doing so gradually, to ensure balance in the oil market and "comfortable" prices. "We will all see together how the situation unfolds. So far no immediate response is required," he said.

Moscow promises to closely monitor foreign businesses that return to Russia
Moscow promises to closely monitor foreign businesses that return to Russia

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Moscow promises to closely monitor foreign businesses that return to Russia

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, June 20 (Reuters) - Russia's Prosecutor General Igor Krasnov, who has led the state's efforts to seize property worth 2.4 trillion roubles ($31 billion), on Friday said foreign companies that return to the country would be watched closely to ensure Russia benefited. Moscow has placed around a dozen foreign-owned assets under state management in the more than three years that Russia has been fighting in Ukraine and prosecutors have stepped up the seizure of domestic assets through the courts this year. Now, as the economy begins to slow after two years of growth fuelled by high military spending, Russian officials are trying to find the balance between insulating the economy from exposure to Western nations it considers unfriendly and the need for growth to keep funding the conflict in Ukraine. "We will closely follow the government's actions," Krasnov said. "That is, who will come... on what terms they will come." "We will definitely look at making sure that the conditions under which our (Russian) business operates are better (when Western business returns)," Krasnov said. It must be profitable for Russia's own firms, he said. Russia is prioritising domestic companies, some of whom have taken market share vacated by Western firms, such as McDonald's (MCD.N), opens new tab and Unilever (ULVR.L), opens new tab, that have left since Russia launched the conflict in Ukraine. President Vladimir Putin on Friday said the Russian economy could not develop effectively without investment and said Moscow would create conditions to make foreign partners feel comfortable. He said Russian companies should fulfil legally binding buybacks with foreign companies, but stressed that Russia would support measures that benefit its own interests. "If someone left for political reasons, under pressure from their own political elites, their countries, then this means they are unreliable partners," Putin said. Kirill Dmitriev, chief of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, has said that U.S. companies are in talks to return to Russia, although lawyers and investors have told Reuters that sanctions must be lifted before any significant influx can take place. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov told the Izvestia daily on Friday that no foreign companies had yet submitted requests to return. "There are no applications for entry yet, but I feel that the situation is changing and interest in investing in Russia is growing," Siluanov said. The sparse Western presence at Russia's forum suggests otherwise, with some analysts also pointing to concerns about property rights. Two sources from Russia's energy and banking sectors said some companies may be interested in returning as there could be money to be made, but not in the current situation. Assets owned by French yoghurt maker Danone ( opens new tab and Danish brewer Carlsberg ( opens new tab are among the foreign assets taken under state control and sold to Kremlin-friendly buyers since 2022. ($1 = 78.4955 roubles)

Putin on Israel-Iran, Ukraine and the risk of the world sliding towards World War Three
Putin on Israel-Iran, Ukraine and the risk of the world sliding towards World War Three

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Putin on Israel-Iran, Ukraine and the risk of the world sliding towards World War Three

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, June 20 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin made the following comments at a plenary session of the St Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday. Putin spoke in Russian. The quotes were translated into English by Reuters. ON UKRAINE: "...I consider the Russian and Ukrainian people to be one people - in fact, in this sense, the whole of Ukraine is ours." "We have such an ancient - it's not a saying, not a parable, but an ancient rule: where a Russian soldier's foot treads, it is ours." "We, by the way have never questioned the right of Ukrainian people to independence and sovereignty. At the same time, the grounds on which Ukraine became independent and sovereign were laid out in the 1991 declaration of Ukraine's independence, it is clearly written in black and white that Ukraine is a non-aligned, non-nuclear, neutral state." When asked what Russia's response would be if Ukraine used a dirty bomb, Putin said: "This would be a colossal their last always respond to all threats that are posed to us in a reciprocal our response will be very rough and, most likely, catastrophic for and unfortunately, for Ukraine itself. I hope it will never come to that." ON ISRAEL-IRAN: "In such cases, it is better not to get ahead of ourselves in order not to harm the process, but in my opinion, there are points of possible common ground. We are presenting our position to both sides. As you know, we are in contact with Israel and our Iranian friends. "We are not seeking to mediate, we are just proposing ideas. And if they are attractive to both countries, we'll be happy about our proposals are also being discussed, we have contacts with our Iranian friends almost on a daily basis, so let's see." ON HIS FEARS OF WORLD WAR THREE: "It's is happening in the Middle East, and of course, we are very concerned about what is happening around Iran's nuclear facilities." ON IRAN'S BUSHEHR NUCLEAR PLANT: "...We defend Iran's right to the peaceful have built a nuclear reactor in Iran, in we, despite the complexity of the situation, despite the definite danger, we continue this work. We are not evacuating our personnel from there."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store