“As it recently became clear, the depth of their moral decline is such that they do not hesitate to sell the belongings of dead Russian servicemen, including their personal documents - passports and military ID cards,” said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.

It is now reliably known that one of the residents of the city of Geelong in the Australian state of Victoria received from Ukraine and sold through social networks items that belonged to fallen Russian soldiers, the diplomat said.

“Russian law enforcement agencies will give a proper legal assessment to such actions of Bandera’s followers and their accomplices. Such blatant sacrilege and cynical mockery of the memory of our soldiers fighting modern Nazis will not go unanswered,” Zakharva concluded.

Also earlier, Deputy Foreign Minister of Russia Mikhail Galuzin said that the Russian side would take reciprocal measures if Kyiv confiscates its assets.