Hundreds of sappers work there every day.

Found ammunition is stored in a special place for further investigative actions.

This is the report of Nastyaschech vremiya.

The history of the full-scale invasion in this direction can be studied in the cemetery of the remnants of Russian ammunition that was launched on Kharkiv.

Remnants of "Hrads", mines, air missiles - these are the first months.

Later, when the Ukrainian military pushed the Russian troops away from the city, the shelling did not stop, but the calibers became larger.

Russian troops can no longer reach Kharkiv with conventional artillery.

Now S-300 missiles are launched from Belgorod region.

"Now the situation is a little better than it was in the summer, but practically every week two or three cruise missiles are fired at critical infrastructure facilities, energy supply facilities, and gas facilities.

Every day, in fact every hour, the border territories are shelled," says Ivan Sokal, director of the Department of Civil Defense of the Kharkiv Regional Military Administration.

Thousands of unexploded mines and ammunition are still lying on hundreds of hectares of Kharkiv region.

"In addition to manual and mechanized demining, there was also remote demining.

To date, the most injured sappers are in the Kharkiv region," explains Ihar Avcharuk, head of the pyrotechnic work group of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.

Investigative actions are being carried out with the remains of ammunition.

Ukrainian law enforcement officers are studying, identifying numbers, finding out where they are from, who fired, how many Ukrainian citizens died from these bombs and shells.

All this is done in order to bring to justice the Russian soldiers who shelled Ukrainian cities and villages.