Putin’s invading troops ‘using WW1-era metal DARTS’: Russian shell ‘packed with inch-long arrows’ 

Among the horrors that have rained down upon Bucha, deadly Russian mini darts designed to shred human flesh have been turning up in front gardens.

‘Flechettes’ are sharp, one-inch-long nail-like projectiles with fins on one end to make them more aerodynamic, which were more commonly used in the First World War than modern warfare. 

Russian artillery shells that operate like true shrapnel projectiles containing hundreds of flechettes have apparently been fired over towns and civillian areas in the Kyiv region.

They are not technically outlawed by international convention but some human rights groups have decried their use due to their indiscriminate and imprecise nature. 

‘They should never be used in built-up civilian areas,’ Amnesty International has said. 

Vintage steel flechette darts used in artillery as early as World War I. They have been fired over Bucha, allegedly by Russian forces before they retreated

Neil Gibson, a munitions expert at the UK-based Fenix Insights group identified the shells, saying the 122 mm 3Sh1 is among a few Russian munitions that carry the projectiles. Inside are hundreds of flechettes that fan out in a conical pattern over up to 300 yards

Neil Gibson, a munitions expert at the UK-based Fenix Insights group identified the shells, saying the 122 mm 3Sh1 is among a few Russian munitions that carry the projectiles. Inside are hundreds of flechettes that fan out in a conical pattern over up to 300 yards

The Washington Post reports that the flechettes had been falling in the streets of Bucha, burying themselves into cars and walls as well as just lying on the ground

The Washington Post reports that the flechettes had been falling in the streets of Bucha, burying themselves into cars and walls as well as just lying on the ground

The Washington Post reports that the flechettes had been falling in the streets of Bucha, burying themselves into cars and walls as well as just lying on the ground.

‘If you look closely on the ground around my house, you will find a lot more of them,’ said Svitlana Chmut, 54, a Bucha resident who discovered them in embedded in and around her house one morning. 

She combed the surrounding areas and gathered up a pile of the little deadly projectiles on the morning of March 25 or 26, but there are thousands more scattered around.

They are designed to spray shrapnel in a conical pattern up to 300 yard wide which cut down infantry formations producing gunshot-like wounds.

But it seems that they would serve little tactical purpose in a civilian town like Bucha, where Ukrainian forces do not mass in bunched up groups in the open.  

Among Russian munitions recovered once their forces retreated in the Andreevka just a few miles from Bucha were the 122 mm 3Sh1 flechette shells.

Neil Gibson, a munitions expert at the UK-based Fenix Insights group identified the shells, saying the 122 mm 3Sh1 is among a few Russian munitions that carry the projectiles.

Maj. Volodymyr Fito, a spokesperson for Ukrainian land forces command, said the Ukrainian military does not use shells with fléchettes. 

They have a long history, first being used to kill people in warfare during World War I, and they were used by the United States – who refer to them as ‘Beehive’ anti-personnel projectiles – in Vietnam. 

Among Russian munitions recovered once their forces retreated in the Andreevka just a few miles from Bucha were the 122 mm 3Sh1 flechette shells

Among Russian munitions recovered once their forces retreated in the Andreevka just a few miles from Bucha were the 122 mm 3Sh1 flechette shells

Maj. Volodymyr Fito, a spokesperson for Ukrainian land forces command, said the Ukrainian military does not use shells with flechettes

Maj. Volodymyr Fito, a spokesperson for Ukrainian land forces command, said the Ukrainian military does not use shells with flechettes

Israel stands accused of using flechettes in Gaza in 2014. Six flechette shells were fired towards the village of Khuzaa, east of Khan Younis, on 17 July, according to the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights. 

In 2010 Israeli forces decided to apparently phase out use of flechette shells after they fired one at a Reuters camerman, mistaking his camera for a weapon and killing eight civilians along with him. 

Today the streets of Bucha, which were littered with rubble and destroyed Russian tanks just weeks ago, are clear once again after an incredible cleaning effort by Ukrainian locals. 

Volunteers have been working tirelessly to clean up the town’s neighbourhoods, with images on Monday showing a place that is almost unrecognisable from the pictures that shocked the world earlier this month. 

APRIL 3: Soldiers walk amid destroyed Russian tanks and cars in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv

APRIL 3: Soldiers walk amid destroyed Russian tanks and cars in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv

APRIL 6: A Ukrainian serviceman stands amid destroyed Russian tanks in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv. The town was the scene of heavy fighting in the early days of the war, and while Ukrainian forces destroyed several Russian tanks and other armoured vehicles, the town was overrun and occupied by Russian for around a month

APRIL 6: A Ukrainian serviceman stands amid destroyed Russian tanks in Bucha, on the outskirts of Kyiv. The town was the scene of heavy fighting in the early days of the war, and while Ukrainian forces destroyed several Russian tanks and other armoured vehicles, the town was overrun and occupied by Russian for around a month

APRIL 18: Men walk past burnt military APCs in a field where destroyed vehicles are being brought, as the clean-up of the town continues

APRIL 18: Men walk past burnt military APCs in a field where destroyed vehicles are being brought, as the clean-up of the town continues

Pictured: Vokzal'na street in Bucha, the site of heavy fighting since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, looks unrecognisable from the photographs of the town that shocked the world when they were released in early April. The burnt-out wreckages of Russian military vehicles that lined the street have been moved by workers who have been cleaning up the town

Pictured: Vokzal’na street in Bucha, the site of heavy fighting since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, looks unrecognisable from the photographs of the town that shocked the world when they were released in early April. The burnt-out wreckages of Russian military vehicles that lined the street have been moved by workers who have been cleaning up the town

APRIL 18: Workers in high-visibility jackets work next to a house next to a house - its roof caved in from shelling. It appears to be one of the few buildings on the street that remains at least partially in-tact. The rest have been reduced to rubble

APRIL 18: Workers in high-visibility jackets work next to a house next to a house – its roof caved in from shelling. It appears to be one of the few buildings on the street that remains at least partially in-tact. The rest have been reduced to rubble

Atrocities carried out by Russian forces were uncovered after the town was liberated from its occupiers, resulting in international condemnation of Moscow’s actions. 

Photographs from the suburban town near Kyiv showed workers shovelling gravel and sweeping the heavily-shelled roads which were turned into a war zone in the early days of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Gone are the burnt out wreckages of Russian military vehicles, much of the debris from destroyed Ukrainian homes, and the bodies of slain civilians that lined the streets after Kyiv’s forces re-took the town after Russia’s brutal month-long occupation. Now, the scenes of devastation have been replaced with signs of life returning.

In one image, two men in high-visibility jackets are shown working together to shovel debris into the bucket of an excavator. Another shows a team of locals working their way down the road, filling a skip with rubble. 

Others are shown working next to a house – its roof caved in from shelling. It appears to be one of the few buildings on the street that remains at least partially in-tact. Piles of rubble, once the homes of Bucha’s locals, line both sides of Vokzal’na street – the site of many killings and much of the fighting in the commuter town.      

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