Russian schoolchildren forced to help make flying grenades for drones attacking Ukrainians

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Russian schoolchildren forced to help make flying grenades for drones attacking Ukrainians

Russian schoolchildren have been forced to make supplies for President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine – including spare parts to fly grenades dropped by kamikaze drones, according to reports.

Young students at a school in the Republic of Tatarstan region were filmed putting the finishing touches on a 3D-printed orange “tail” to be attached to a VOG-17 grenade, according to local channel Nokrat.

A schoolboy, Azamat Gimazov, explained with a smile that the grenade was “connected to a drone, then dropped.”

The tail is needed “so it can fly evenly,” the boy said.

A journalist explains in a voiceover that although the brightly colored “tails” may look like “toys,” they “help grenades hit targets, when fired from a drone, without tipping over in the air.”

A schoolboy from Russia’s Tatarstan region is seen working on the “tail” of a flying grenade to be dropped on Ukraine. social media/e2w a toy-like orange “tail” is attached to a VOG-17 flying grenade, dropped from a kamikaze drone. social media/e2w

Since the start of the war in February of last year, a growing number of after-school programs and hobby groups for children have produced supplies for the troops, from camouflage nets to tourniquets.

Students as young as 9 years old at another school in Tatarstan have been making handicrafts and walking sticks for wounded soldiers on the front lines, as part of the increasingly active militarization of Russia’s education system.

Children in an after-school woodworking class at the Aleksandro-Slobodskaya School have so far made more than 60 pairs of canes, 40 of which have been sent to the hospital, each with a handwritten note of “get well,” local outlet Novosti Zainska reported.

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Children as young as 9 at a school in Tatarstan have made walking sticks and canes for wounded Russian soldiers. social media/e2w The Aleksandro-Slobodskaya School has already sent 40 crutches to the hospital. social media/e2w

It took two hours to remove a pair of wooden sticks – a noisy job that had to be done after the school day or in the evening, so as not to disturb other classes, the report said.

The same school has produced more than 2,000 trench candles for use on the front lines.

Meanwhile, students in remote Udmurtia have bonded over knitting “stump socks” for hospitals treating soldiers who lost limbs in battle.

The alarming report comes as Russia has lost 315,000 of its troops to death or injury – or nearly 90% of its active force when the conflict began, US intelligence sources told Reuters.

Students in the Udmurtia region are busy knitting “stump socks” for soldiers who have lost limbs. social media/e2w

On Tuesday, Putin also signed a law obliging primary and secondary schools next academic year to offer Soviet-style “labor lessons” where students will be introduced to carpentry, sawing and repair work, the controlled NTV channel reported. by the government. .

The law — set to take effect next year — also prohibits students from using cell phones in class, except in life-threatening emergencies.

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Source: thtrangdai.edu.vn/en/