Imagine a nightmare, not in a movie, but in real life – Russian drones in Ukraine are turning the city of Kherson into a real hunt for civilians! Yes, you read that right. This horror is called “human safari” and it’s not fiction, but a bloody reality unfolding in southern Ukraine.
Little Dmitrik, a baby just one year and two months old, became a victim of this monstrous game. Toys scattered around the destroyed yard testify to his short life cut short by a cold-blooded drone attack. Shrapnel pierced his heart, and his mother screamed in panic “Baby, baby, run!” while his father tried to save him – but it was too late.
Russia uses so-called FPV drones, small flying devices remotely controlled by operators who watch the target in real time. These drones don’t choose their targets – whether it’s a vehicle, man, woman, child, or even a dog, the goal is to destroy. Andriy Yermak, a close aide to President Zelensky, clearly states: “This was not a mistake, this was a manhunt!”
Residents of Kherson live in fear, calling their city “human safari zones.” Attacks are so frequent that local authorities have advised citizens not to leave their homes without medical tourniquets to stop life-threatening bleeding. Supermarkets, buses, cars – all are targets of these deadly drones.
Human Rights Watch and the United Nations have documented hundreds of such attacks, and according to the UN, nearly half of confirmed child deaths in Ukraine are caused by explosive weapons used in populated areas. This is not war; this is a bloody game without rules.
Lieutenant Denis Yaroslavski from Ukrainian special forces points out that some Russian soldiers are recruited from prisons and have serious mental disorders, which further intensifies the brutality of these attacks. Eddie Etu, a retired American marine now helping Ukraine with drone construction, says this is a cold-blooded massacre ongoing for over a year.
This tragedy is not just a number or news – these are lives, families, children killed while playing in their yards. If you had trouble believing the brutality of this conflict until now, now you know the truth.
And while the world watches, Kherson is turning into a bloody arena where people are hunted like animals. Will we allow such things to be forgotten? Or will we finally speak out about this horror? If you have something to say, maybe it’s time to say it – silence is complicity.
So, what do you think about this “human safari”? Is this a new level of war brutality or something we should have expected? Share your thoughts, because this is a story that must not be forgotten.