SSU exposes coordinator of Russian sabotage groups in Kharkiv region and collaborator who wanted ‘position’ in occupying authorities in Dnipropetrovsk region (video)
The SSU is countering subversive and sabotage activities that accompany hostilities on Ukrainian territory. The enemy is using them to influence the course of the war and the citizens’ attitude.
In Kharkiv:
The SSU special purpose unit detained a man who was coordinating sabotage groups of L/DNR terrorist units in the region.
During detention, the so-called ‘reconnaissance notebook’ and ‘senior radiotelephone operator’s notebook’ used by the occupying army were confiscated from him. In addition, he had 5 grenades, TNT bombs with fuses and sim-cards of Russian and Belarusian operators.
He is currently testifying to the SSU investigators.
In Odesa region:
The SSU, in cooperation with Moldovan special services, exposed a transnational organized group that illegally smuggled Ukrainian conscripts abroad.
The criminals moved ‘illegals’ to Saratskyi district of Odesa region, from where they were taken to Moldova under the guise of deportation. From there they were handed over to volunteers as refugees.
The cost of ‘services’ reached USD 10,000 per conscript.
In Dnipro:
The SSU detained a collaborator who aspired for a leadership position in potential occupiers’ administration.
Until recently, the active supporter of RuZZkiy Mir on social networks worked at a critical infrastructure facility in Dnipro and was fired.
He collected information for the occupiers on the employees of this facility, their political views and level of support of Russia.
In Poltava region:
The SSU exposed a collaborator. The native of Russia from the very beginning of the war supported the occupiers’ war crimes, disseminated information about the ‘liberators’ on the Internet and campaigned for capture of Ukrainian cities.
In addition, the SSU cyber specialists shut down a bot farm operating in the region.
A local resident, supporting the ideas of RuZZkiy Mir, sold access to virtual numbers of Ukrainian mobile operators to register bots on social networks.
His clients were Russian citizens who used bots to spread panic and fakes among Ukrainians and accuse the Ukrainian Armed Forces of war crimes committed by Russians.
In Ivano-Frankivsk region:
The SSU exposed an agitator who was spreading anti-Ukrainian and destructive content on social media.
She administered YouTube channels, Facebook profiles and VKontakte pages. She advocated for the idea of ‘one Russian-Rus people’, restoration of monuments to Soviet executioners, and a return to the 1936 Stalinist constitution.
On the first day of the full-scale Russian attack on Ukraine, she sent a photo of the missile strike on Ivano-Frankivsk airport to a subscriber with a Russian number.
Each of the collaborators will be held accountable for the crimes committed against state security!