“The woman was laying anti-tank mines near the house”: the State Emergency Service warned not to touch the “gifts” of the occupiers. VIDEO

“The woman was laying anti-tank mines near the house”: the State Emergency Service warned not to touch the “gifts” of the occupiers.  VIDEO

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The State Service for Emergency Situations told the stories of people who were lucky enough to remain unharmed after taking mines into their hands. The department calls such cases a miracle and urges not to approach suspicious objects, but to call sappers. The rescuers tell how they once came to a grandmother who complained that there was a “hail pipe” sticking out of her garden. “She started to panic because of that pipe, and she took the tank mines with her hands and placed them near the house,” the State Emergency Service said. The woman’s homestead contained PTM-1 anti-tank mines, which have a self-destruct mechanism and can explode at any moment. However, they did not scare the hostess. “They’re plastic green ones like that, so it’s not scary,” she says. The emergency department also told about a man who was removing weeds from the garden and came across a tubus. “It’s green, twisted like an eggplant. The woman shouted don’t touch it, but we took it from the garden and moved it,” says the man. Fortunately, the mine did not explode. The man together with the head of the village council called sappers. “When the Russians covered Kharkiv with mines, one of them hit the roof of the garage. It didn’t explode. In order to minimize damage, we tried to pull it out with a noose. However, when we started to pull it, it exploded,” says an employee of the State Emergency Service. We will remind you that earlier we wrote about what explosive objects you can come across, how to deal with them and where to turn in the event of their discovery. Read also: Mines instead of mushrooms: when will forests become safe?

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