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Western Media Spread Fake Report About Use of N. Korean Missile in Kharkov

Sputnik – 30.04.2024

Western media outlets are disseminating a fake report claiming that Russia used a North Korean -made missile to strike a target in Kharkov, a source at the United Nations told Sputnik on Monday.

Earlier in the day, Reuters reported that some three experts allegedly provided a report to the UN Security Council Sanctions Committee with a conclusion that the debris from a missile found at the site of a January 2 strike in the Ukrainian city of Kharkov belongs to a North Korea Hwasong-11 series ballistic missile.

“The report is fake. It’s non-existent. The group of experts did not submit any report to the UN Security Council,” the source said.

The fake document described by Reuters was written by a group of specialists who went to Ukraine on the invitation of the government and wrote what the Ukrainian puppet authorities told them, the source said.

“It has no value,” the source said, adding that there were no missile or conventional weapons specialists in the group.

The Ukrainian mission to the United Nations organized the trip for the specialists, who made their conclusion based on the alleged similarity of the missile remains they saw in Kharkov with those that can be seen at military parades in North Korea.

“The group of experts did not present any report. There is a procedure for a report approval and submission to the UN Security Council and it means that this report contains their personal views. Simply speaking, they wrote a report on a business trip that was offered to them [by Ukraine],” the source said.

Russia has repeatedly dismissed media reports and US claims that Moscow is using North Korean missiles to attack targets in Ukraine. The United States has not provided to date any evidence supporting its claims.

April 30, 2024 - Posted by | Fake News, Mainstream Media, Warmongering | , ,

1 Comment »

  1. The official Dutch news broadcaster (NOS) once wrote that a Russian Iskander rocket had killed scores of people at a market in Ukraine. One look at the photograph revealed that this could not have been an Iskander rocket, based on the position of the wings, but it could have been a Ukrainian Tochka-U rocket . Later that day I returned to read the article again and the word Iskander had been removed. Those guys at the site probably didn’t know the difference between those two rockets and just translated the text.

    The names for Kiev and Odessa are always spelled by them as “Kyiv” and “Odesa.” The Ukrainian names are “Київ” and “Одеса.” The Dutch names are similar to the English names.

    Today an “Iskander” rocket hit a school in “Odesa” after is was purportedly taken down by air defence. Perhaps this is true.

    Like

    Comment by Balthasar Gerards | May 1, 2024 | Reply


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