According to the DBR, 33 cars were empty, and the rest - with products.

In particular, diesel cars, glass, soybeans, limestone and reinforced concrete products were transported in 84 cars belonging to Belarusian enterprises.

And in twenty Russian cars - iron ore.

The total value of the confiscated property is more than 200 million hryvnias (almost a million dollars in equivalent - RS).

Earlier, Ukrainian law enforcement agencies reported the confiscation of 100 cars with Belarusian potash fertilizers, which were sent in transit to Asian countries, were confiscated at the railway station Korosten (Zhytomyr region).

On March 11, it became known that 23 Belarusian trucks with products were confiscated in favor of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the Volyn region, and on March 29 - several more trucks in the Chernivtsi region.

However, in the second case, Ukraine promised to send the goods to their destination, as it belonged to partner countries.

On March 31, the State Bureau of Investigation of Ukraine and the Bureau of Economic Security announced the nationalization of 576 railway cars and tanks in Cherkasy and Ivano-Frankivsk regions, owned by businessmen from Belarus and Russia.

One week after the start of the war, the Ukrainian parliament passed a law regulating the confiscation of property of the state of Russia and Russian legal entities in favor of the Ukrainian state.

It does not mention Belarus at all and there is no mechanism for confiscating Belarusian property.

Russia's war against Ukraine

  • At 5 am on February 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the start of a military operation against Ukraine in the Donbas at the request of the DNR and LNR groups.

    He said Russia did not plan to occupy Ukrainian lands, and called on the Ukrainian military to lay down its arms and "go home."

  • Earlier, on February 21, during a televised address to the Russians, Putin called the so-called "DPR" and "LPR" independent states within the regions.

    On February 22, the Federation Council ratified the decision.

  • On the first day of the war, the Russians captured Snake Island, where they captured 13 Ukrainian border guards.

    Then they were exchanged for Russian prisoners.

  • All the days of the war are shelling Ukrainian cities with missiles, flying aircraft.

    For more than a month of active hostilities, Russia has managed to partially control only Kherson, Melitopol, Energodar and surround Mariupol, the latter is almost completely destroyed, the city is abducting journalists.

    At the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, which was seized by the Russians, only 600 hours of work allowed the rotation of personnel, and on March 31, the Russians began to withdraw from Chernobyl.

  • On February 10, Belarusian-Russian maneuvers began near the Ukrainian border, ending with Russian troops remaining in Belarus, contrary to Moscow's earlier promises, and attacking Ukraine from the north using Belarusian airfields, bases and roads.

    Representatives of the Lukashenko regime justify the war, the opposition considers the territory of Belarus occupied and calls for resistance to Russian invaders.

  • The Russians, according to the Ukrainian side and Western countries, have repeatedly underestimated their statistics of casualties, reported 1,351 deaths, while the United States says more than 10,000 dead, and Ukraine about more than 18,000 killed invaders.

  • On February 27, the illegitimate leader of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, admitted that rockets had been launched from the territory of Ukraine.

    On the same day, in a telephone conversation with Vladimir Zelensky, Lukashenko promised that there would be no attacks from Belarusian territory, but after it, missiles flew from Belarus to Ukraine again.

  • On February 27, the International Legion of Territorial Defense was established in Ukraine, and foreign volunteers were encouraged to join.

    Belarusians, in particular the White Legion, also joined it.

    As of March 31, three Belarusians were killed, including volunteers, one with the call sign Litvin, the other Dmitry Apanasovich, and Tour, who served in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

  • On March 20, 11 pro-Russian political movements and parties were banned in Ukraine.

  • On March 30, the UN approved the composition of an independent commission to investigate Russian war crimes in Ukraine.

    It includes people who have worked in conflict resolution in Rwanda and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  • Contrary to Putin's claims of attacks exclusively on military facilities, the Russians are bombing schools, kindergartens and residential areas of Ukrainian cities.

    The Russians are using banned weapons, including cluster bombs against civilians.

  • The number of refugees from Ukraine has exceeded 4 million people.

    According to the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Lyudmila Denisova, about 400,000 Ukrainians were forcibly deported to Russia during the war.

    In particular, such cases were recorded in besieged Mariupol.

  • In response to support for the war by ROC Patriarch Kirill, Ukrainian parishes of the Moscow Patriarchate began to move en masse to the autocephalous Orthodox Church of Ukraine.

  • Independent verification of information about hostilities provided by officials of various parties is not yet possible.