
An injured Ukrainian soldier was stuck behind enemy lines for days. He escaped on an e-bike airdropped by a drone
A video of the dramatic rescue showed a UAV drone airdropping the 40kg bike down to the wounded man, who was surrounded by Russian forces, before he cycles away.
The soldier's Rubizh brigade said three men were killed by enemy fire during a skirmish in Siversk, northern Ukraine, leaving the soldier on his own for five days.
In a video the soldier, call sign 'Tanker', said: 'Our drones covered us from above as best as they could. Then they threw two gas cylinders straight into our hole and a lighter. We caught fire.
'Every day, I was surrounded, from all sides. I fought back as best I could.'
Brigade commander Mykola Hrytsenko explained the challenges they faced in trying to rescue their stranded comrade.
'The enemy was in front, behind, and on both flanks, completely surrounded,' the commander said. 'It was impossible to drive up with equipment because the enemy was everywhere. He couldn't get out on his own either, because he had to walk 1.5km to the nearest position.
'In his condition, with his injuries, he simply wouldn't have made it.'
The brigade then came up with the bold plan to deliver a vehicle to him by drone.
The first two attempts to fly the bike in failed, with Russian forces shooting the first out of the sky and the second crashing.
They managed to get the bike to the soldier on the third attempt - but his ordeal was not over yet.
After fleeing 400m he hit a remote mine. Tank limped a further 200m with a leg injury before he was rescued. A second e-bike was then delivered, which he rode for 15 minutes to an evacuation point.
'To carry out this operation, they had to calculate the right time of day, the right weather conditions that would allow him to do it,' Cmndr Hrytsenko added.
Reports of the rescue effort emerged after Vladimir Putin's forces launched a wave of missile attacks on the capital Kyiv in the early hours of Thursday, killing 16 people, including a six-year-old boy and his mother.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky urged his allies to bring about "regime change" in Russia following the attack.
'If the world doesn't aim to change the regime in Russia, that means even after the war ends, Moscow will still try to destabilise neighbouring countries," he said.
"Today the world has once again seen Russia's response to our desire for peace ... Therefore, peace without strength is impossible," the Ukrainian president added.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
25 minutes ago
- Reuters
Death toll from boat capsize off Yemen rises to 86, security sources say
Aug 5 (Reuters) - The confirmed death toll from the capsize of a boat carrying migrants off Yemen on Sunday has risen to 86, security sources told Reuters on Tuesday. The sources said the boat had been carrying 170 migrants, and that 42 had been rescued.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Russian drone strike on Ukrainian rail hub Lozova leaves two dead
LOZOVA, Ukraine, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Russia carried out its largest attack on Lozova, a railway hub east of Ukraine, on Tuesday, with dozens of drone strikes that left two people dead and wounded 13 others, including two children, Ukrainian officials said. Governor Oleh Syniehubov said the attack involved 34 drones and damaged the train station and a nearby rail depot. It temporarily knocked out power to 80% of the town of around 50,000 in the Kharkiv region, which is connected by rail to strategic cities in Ukraine's east. "Critical infrastructure, apartment buildings and private homes have been damaged ... Lozova has endured the largest attack since the beginning of the war," Serhiy Zelenskiy, head of the town council, wrote on the Telegram messaging app. Rubble and debris littered the station, a stately Soviet-era building which was heavily damaged in the attack. "For Lozova it was a very unusual situation. Of course there have been strikes before, but nothing as big as what we had this evening," said local resident Oksana Samoilenko, 41. Some residents with cars had left the town earlier in the morning following the strike, she said. State railway operator Ukrzaliznytsia said one of its employees was among the two people killed and four others wounded. Ukraine's air force said it had downed 29 of 46 drones launched by Russia across Ukraine overnight. One ballistic missile and 17 drones struck various locations, it said. There was no immediate comment from Russia. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched with a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Bikini-clad women brawl and wrestle each other to the ground as fight breaks out on Ukrainian beach after a Russian song is played
A beach brawl broke out in war-ravaged Odesa when two bikini-clad women clashed and wrestled each other to the ground. One media outlet claimed the battle was over the playing of Russian music in Ukraine 's leading Black Sea resort during the war. There is a ban on the public playing of Russian music in Ukraine due to Vladimir Putin 's illegal invasion, although the exact reason for this free-for-all was not confirmed. The women were seen pulling hair and rolling in the sand as tempers flared. Men on the beach then got stuck into the brawl at popular Golden Beach in Odesa. The fighting came as passions flared during a beach respite from the war, which has seen daily drone or missile strikes on Odesa. The surrounding region was attacked yet again overnight. The opposition-leaning Strana news outlet claimed that 'the conflict arose because of Russian music'. Some men were seen getting involved in the brawl as the two women battled each other A report stated: 'Holidaymakers fought on a beach in Odesa after a song in Russian was played.' Odesa region has faced more than 700 Russian attacks during the war, which began in February 2022. At least 131 civilians were killed and more than 312 were wounded.