A detailed video account, published by Ukrainian special forces, described how the soldier refused to lay down his food, while one of his compatriots tried to kill himself by running into a pillar.

They later asked to watch Korean romance films, the Ukrainians said.

“He was lying there, with his head and an arm wounded. He had a grenade, a knife and a sausage on him,” one of the soldiers of Ukraine’s 95th Air Assault Brigade said in an interview published on Tuesday.

“I asked him to drop everything, but he refused to drop the sausage because it was food, so we let him keep it.”

  • DeceptichumOPM
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    15 hours ago

    I feel a bit sad for the NKs, you really have to wonder how much the world they know and if they’re really aware of what they’re even doing over there.

    • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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      13 hours ago

      from what im aware of those who are slightly more wealthy or live in border cities are more aware than ones who live off in the middle of nowhere. many of the North Koreans who live closer to the chinese border are related to or know a person whose greenlit to do business in China and return. Even theough chinas reletive censorship, its hard to not be able to learn about the rest of the world.

      • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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        12 hours ago

        I doubt that a large portion of north koreans is spending any time outside the country. It sounds to me like only the elite gets to spend time in foreign resorts.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Everybody is coming from their own little North Korea. How much do you actually know about the world? Do you know everything about everything you’re a part of? More than some, less than others.

      Empathize with the man, but remember empathy is borne of understanding. Pity is borne of contempt.

      • DeceptichumOPM
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        15 hours ago

        I have access to the Internet, can communicate freely with people elsewhere, travel freely, and have not been force fed propaganda to the same degree.

        It’s not really the same, all they know is what they are told. I am free to explore truths and oppose my state.

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          All true and all good things. And you spend a lot of time opposing your state? You avoid supporting oligarchs who profit from slavery and ecological exploitation? Your government fights for freedom and your representatives act in your best interest? Everything you buy is ethically sourced, and all the information you consume is unbiased? Your food is fresh and free of microplastics? You’ve traveled to every destination you’d like?

          Suffering and oppression is not a competition. Yes, North Korea is ruled by a third generation megalomaniac who censors all speech and makes life hell for his people. North Koreans starve to death without understanding the larger world around them. That’s bad, and the world would be better with fewer tyrants.

          My point is that the lesson here is not that North Korea is the one bad place. The lesson is how easy it is to be indoctrinated, to be exploited without knowing more than they want you to know. You see him and think how much better off you are because you have Google and a frequent flyer credit card. You should be thinking how much you have in common, because it is a lot more than you would expect.