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Kiev using Bucha-style false flag propaganda in Kherson — politician

Additionally, Alexander Malkevich said that the Kiev authorities had made a staged video about the distribution of humanitarian aid to local residents in Kherson

GENICHESK, November 16. /TASS/. The Ukrainian authorities are using the models of Bucha and the Kharkov Region to design and spread fake news about mass graves allegedly found in Kherson, Alexander Malkevich, a member of Russia’s Public Chamber and a freelance adviser to the Kherson Region acting governor, told TASS on Wednesday.

"Those publications are coming out right now. The story is told by the Ukrainian authorities who claim they are finding mass graves. They publish photos and write that those are allegedly mass graves dated to late February - early March, which implies that those victims [were killed] when our servicemen appeared," he said.

"By the example of the Kharkov Region, it is known that the Ukrainian armed forces always abandon their comrades-in-arms in retreat. Those were laid to rest by our servicemen and employees of the civil-military administration. And then they dug up these bodies in the Kharkov Region to allege that those were [civilian] fatalities. They will try to turn it around on us," he said.

Additionally, Malkevich said that the Kiev authorities had made a staged video about the distribution of humanitarian aid to local residents in Kherson.

"We saw a video about humanitarian aid delivered to Kherson, so a report was released and a box was ticked off. There is not a shred of evidence that the aid has been given out, and to be honest, it is not even clear what arrived there. There were some vehicles inscribed with ‘humanitarian aid’ and a pack of thugs, posing not only with Ukrainian flags, but also with Georgian ones," he added.

On April 3, the Russian Defense Ministry denied the Kiev regime’s allegations of civilian killings in Bucha, in the Kiev Region. The ministry said that the Russian Armed Forces had completely pulled out of Bucha before March 30, but the so-called evidence of crimes did not surface until the fourth day, when officers of the Ukrainian Security Service arrived in the city. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described the situation in Bucha as "a fake attack.".