As demoralized Russian troops sabotage their own weapons systems and flog the parts for scrapsome enterprising Ukrainians, whose normal livelihoods have taken a severe hit since Vladimir Putin’s unprovoked invasion, are making ends meet by selling captured and abandoned Russian gear on eBay.
The trophies include battle-scarred watches and mess kits, uniform hats and cap badges, missile components and tank hatches, good luck charms, boots found near a destroyed Russian columneven sets of long underwear left behind by fleeing (or dead) Russian soldiers.
“This is not just a military artifact — a human life is behind [sic] each of these things, ” one listing for an army belt tells prospective customers.
Another listing reads, “The uniform of a Russian soldier from the war in Ukraine 2022. The lot is unique in that it was taken not in the first days of the war, but roughly speaking these days. Just 3 days ago… this form [sic] was in the hottest place — in the Donbas. ”
At $ 425, the ensemble isn’t cheap. But, as the listing grimly notes: “Good condition, not worn for long :)))”
The seller, who asked that he be identified only by his first name, Taras, told The Daily Beast he owns a small grocery store in Kyiv but that business has slumped dramatically during the war.
“Now, everything is difficult,” Taras said. “EBay helps out and has become the main type of work… Wartime items are of great interest to collectors.”
War souvenirs like these can fetch big bucks on eBay.
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War souvenirs like these can fetch big bucks on eBay.
Supplied by Taras
Since Russian troops entered Ukraine in March, the nation’s economy has all but imploded. Some 50 percent of Ukraine’s businesses have shuttered over the past four months, and about half of all Ukrainians have lost their jobs. Only two percent of the newly unemployed have been able to find ways to stay afloat, according to economist Nataliya Katser-Buchkovska. If the war continues unabated, up to 90 percent of the Ukrainian population could sink into poverty, the UN’s International Labor Organization warned in May.
Taras just started selling war relics this month, and has moved about 20 items so far. Now that his shop is struggling, Taras said he recently started thinking his profession is “Dude who takes [and sells] crazy things. ”
He obtains most of his auction items independently, but also said he takes orders from clients he connects with online.
“Today one of my clients asked me to get and send him a hatch from a damaged tank,” Taras said on Tuesday, adding that he has not yet come across a suitable one. “We have guys from the front line, we buy things from them and thus give support to them.”
A Russian soldier’s boots can be yours for $ 100 on eBay.
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