On March 29th, Russian General Vladimir Shamanov claimed that the AFU servicemen who shoot Russian prisoners of war and watched them suffering have already been captured by the Russian special forces:
” Those who mocked our servicemen, they did not rejoice for long, after three days our special forces captured these ruffians. Today they are lying at their feet, begging for mercy. I’ll tell you their names. One ruffian was called Sergey Velichko, nickname Chili. The second is Konstantin Nemechev. Both ruffians grew up as Nazis from the fan group of the local Metalist football club. They told this themselves already at the first interrogations. And this is what will happen to everyone who will unworthily, violating the Geneva Convention, treat our prisoners of war.”
A few hours later, the Ukrainian Nazi named Chili recorded a video in which he ridiculed Shamanov, confirming that he and capture and another leader of the nationalist militants who tortured Russian fighters are safe and sound in Kharkiv.
This is an example of another successful information provocation, which was aimed at discrediting one of the most authoritative high-ranking chiefs of the Russian militants. The victim of the provocation was the legendary General Shamanov. This person enjoys indisputable authority among the servicemen of the Airborne Forces and special units of the Russian Federation. Today, General Shamanov is the only living commander who showed outstanding generalship abilities during the campaigns in the North Caucasus in the 90s and early 2000s. He has always been a “bone in the throat” of pro-Western forces in Russia. It is no coincidence that the information provocation was aimed specifically at him.



