The correspondent of the French Le Point magazine in Ukraine, Boris Mabellar, prepared a report about a helicopter that crashed in Ukrainian territory, saying that stories have been woven and are still being woven around that helicopter that was spreading terror in the village of Mala Rohan, and its vicinity, about 15 east of Kharkiv.

He adds that the residents of those villages, even those who did not leave the basements of their homes, believe that they saw it while it was being bombed, but what is certain is that the helicopter, a Mi-28, crashed a few days ago in a green field below Mala Rohan's wreckage is still strewn there, with its blades and engine charred and its cockpit crushed, according to the reporter.

In fact, all that remains of this aircraft is its aft fuselage where the aircraft identification number RF-91882 can be read, with a large Z letter and some other symbols.

But none of the villagers want to miss the opportunity to talk about the terrifying helicopter even as they are waiting to distribute food to them after the Russian occupation, and then the intense bombing of the village on the front line, forced all the shops to close, so the residents depend on what is distributed They have to eat weekly.

Opposite Mala Rohan, on the other side of the small depression where the helicopter crashed, two tanks exploded and only the ruins of the fortified base set up by the Russian army remained on a small hill in the middle of the orchards.

This is what's left of the helicopter (Getty Images)

One of the elderly women says that the Russians, after occupying the village, put a tank in the central street and started shooting, and this lasted for several days, during which everyone was holed up inside the basements.

And her husband continues, sitting on the ground, "I went out to watch the battles. The Russians had 5 artillery and tank divisions in the opposite forest. The helicopter came and destroyed the Russian positions one by one."

As for the town’s administrative official, Oleksandr Shmigol, narrates his version of the event, explaining that “the Russian bases were under our fire, so they asked for extensions. ".

It is impossible to determine what actually happened, according to the reporter, but the two stories share a mockery of the Russian "enemy", and Schmigol notes that many people have been taking pieces of the wreckage of this helicopter as souvenirs, noting that he does not expect anything from it after a short time.