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Russian Train Travelers Shown Posters Depicting Putin’s War in Ukraine: Photos

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  • Russians traveling from the mainland to the enclave of Kaliningrad have to stop in Lithuania. 
  • There, they are greeted by an exhibition showing the realities of the war in Ukraine. 
  • “It’s the least that we can do,” a spokesperson for Lithuanian Railways said.

Russians taking the train from Moscow to the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad have to pass through Vilnius station in Lithuania. When their train pauses at the platform, they are greeted with 24 large posters depicting the war in Ukraine. 

The posters show pictures of corpses, injured civilians, grieving families, destroyed homes and infrastructure, and child refugees. 

All posters have the same message: “Today, Putin is killing civilians in Ukraine. Do you support this?”

A poster with a picture taken by Ukrainian photographer Maxim Dondyuk of a war scene, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, is displayed for Russian passengers on their way between Kaliningrad exclave and mainland Russia at Vilnius railway station, Lithuania March 25, 2022.

A poster with a picture taken by Ukrainian photographer Maxim Dondyuk of a war scene, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, is displayed for Russian passengers on their way between Kaliningrad exclave and mainland Russia at Vilnius railway station, Lithuania March 25, 2022.

REUTERS/Andrius Sytas


A map showing the location of Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave next to Lithuania and Poland

A map showing the location of Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave next to Lithuania and Poland

Google Maps/Insider


“As far as we know, Russians are shielded from what is happening in Ukraine.”Maybe we can change the minds of a very small number of passengers,” Mantas Dubauskas, a spokesperson for the state-owned Lithuanian railways, who have erected the posters, told Reuters.

“It’s the least that we can do,” he added.

A banner with a photo by Evgeniy Maloletka, a photographer working for Associated Press (AP), is seen next to other photographs of Russia's war in Ukraine at the railway station in Vilnius, Lithuania on March 25, 2022, where transit trains from Moscow to Kaliningrad make a stop over.

A banner with a photo by Evgeniy Maloletka, a photographer working for Associated Press (AP), is seen next to other photographs of Russia’s war in Ukraine at the railway station in Vilnius, Lithuania on March 25, 2022, where transit trains from Moscow to Kaliningrad make a stop over.

PETRAS MALUKAS/AFP via Getty Images


Workers attach a banner with a photo of a pregnant woman being carried on a stretcher after the bombing of a maternity ward in Mariupol during Russia's war in Ukraine that is displayed as part of an exhibition at the railway station in Vilnius, Lithuania

Workers attach a banner with a photo of a pregnant woman being carried on a stretcher after the bombing of a maternity ward in Mariupol during Russia’s war in Ukraine that is displayed as part of an exhibition at the railway station in Vilnius, Lithuania

PETRAS MALUKAS/AFP via Getty Images


The Russian parliament recently passed a law criminalizing the spread of “fake” news regarding the invasion of Ukraine. 

Russia has repeatedly stated that the atrocities witnessed in Ukraine, including the Bucha massacre and bombing of a Mariupol hospital, are fake. 

Insider’s Mia Jankowicz reported that Putin’s disinformation is so effective, that Ukrainians can’t convince their own families in Russia they are under attack.

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