Brit Graham Phillips who is pro-Putin has allegedly filmed pigs eating dead Ukrainian soldiers and he is facing war crime charges.
The Metropolitan Police War Crimes Team, the CIA and FBI are investigation the traitor Brit as he filmed the pigs eating protected human remains under the Geneva Convention Act and Phillips is heard saying in Russian “It’s a buffet.”
“He’s also eating munching, munching and munching! They’re not even shy.”
“Eat, be healthy,” Phillips adding “It turns out he was useful for someone.”
The British traitor is also being investigated for interviewing and mistreating Prisoner of War Aiden Aslin, 31, The Sun reports.
Phillips interviewed Aslin for a total of 44 minutes and filed the process, Aiden is a former Ukrainian Marine joined his military service before the war started in Ukraine in 2022.
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Aslin can be seen during the interview handcuffed, bruised and looking exhausted in the footage taken by Phillips.
A Met police spokesperson told The Sun on Tuesday evening that they launched an investigation in 2022 and they are “liaising” with the Crown Prosecution Service.

Graham Phillips intervwieing Aiden Aslin
They are investigating several breaches of the Geneva Convention Act and international law.
Phillips was asked by The Sun about why he did not intervene, the British traitor said, “Why should I have intervened in that incident with the pigs?
“Those Ukrainian soldiers came to Donbas to murder the civilians of Donbas, who want to be with Russia, not part of the Ukrainian Nazi regime. They ended up becoming pig fodder.”
He added, “I could say it was pigs eating pigs, but that would be an insult to the pigs.”
Shaun Pinner who is also a former Ukrainian Marine was also a PoW with Aiden Aslin, he was not interviewed by Phillips.
Shaun wrote on Wednesday morning, “The investigation appeared to take a step forward when Scotland Yard officers travelled to Alabama to interview former US serviceman Alexander Drueke — whom I recently interviewed for Voices from the Front.
“If any allegations are substantiated, the implications would be serious. For now, the investigation is ongoing, and no conclusions have been reached.”
“Article 34 of the Geneva Conventions states that the remains of those who die in detention or during hostilities “shall be respected.” The ICRC also requires all parties to take “all possible measures” to prevent the dead from being despoiled.

Graham Philips wanted for war crimes
“Interrogations, meanwhile, must be carried out by authorised military personnel, not foreign civilians, activists, or political content-creators.
“Phillips also filmed a visibly mistreated British POW, Aiden Aslin. Whether the conduct shown meets the legal threshold for wrongdoing is for investigators to determine, but the ethical concerns are self-evident.
“POWs are not free agents. They are isolated, threatened, starved, beaten, or recovering from injuries. Filming them, let alone prompting them with leading questions, raises profound moral and legal concerns.
“Both Drueke and Aslin have publicly described similar circumstances: a camera suddenly pushed in their face, pressure to answer in a certain way, and the constant fear that displeasing their captors could make things worse.”





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