The popular
Gazeta.ru website said several dozen soldiers would be prosecuted after
fleeing a training ground in southern Russia where they were under
pressure to "volunteer" to fight in Ukraine.
The troops had freely enlisted for the army and are not draftees, it said.
It
is the latest report to allege Russian soldiers are being sent to
eastern Ukraine despite Moscow's insistence that only "volunteers" are
fighting alongside the pro-Russian separatists.
The
defence ministry said that only four soldiers named in the report are
under investigation for "disciplinary offences", denying dozens were
involved, the Echo of Moscow radio station reported.
Gazeta.ru
cited mothers of two soldiers from the unit, based in the town of Maikop
in the North Caucasus, as saying their sons had fled a training ground
in the southern Rostov region, fearing being sent to Ukraine.
View gallery
Russian Taifun, mine-resistant armoured vehicles, seen at a training ground during a military drill …
- Pressure to 'volunteer' -
A
lawyer representing five of the soldiers, Tatiana Chernetskaya,
speaking by phone to AFP confirmed the report and said "dozens" of
soldiers faced tribunals.
"They
all have the same story. They all served together in the same unit,"
said Chernetskaya, based in the southern town of Krasnodar.
"They
weren't directly forced to go to Ukraine. People came to the unit to
canvass them to go," Chernetskaya said, adding the recruiters were "not
wearing any identification tags."
"According to the soldiers, they offered 8,000 rubles ($142) per day," she said.
View gallery
A Ukrainian serviceman stands at a position as workers dig trenches on the frontline of fighting aga …
The soldiers fled, not wanting "to find themselves in battle," she said.
Since
Russia is technically not at war with Ukraine, "if they were sent to
Ukraine, it could be seen as a criminal act," she added, calling the
soldiers "law-abiding."
"They
went back to Maikop and started writing resignation letters but these
were not accepted and this all led to the launching of criminal cases."
She said four of her clients are charged with going AWOL while one is charged with the more serious offence of desertion.
She said soldiers started going on trial in March and several had already been convicted.
Gazeta.ru cited the mother of 21-year-old soldier Ivan Shevkunov, who is facing up to 10 years' jail as a deserter.
"He
said that soldiers were being forced to go (to Ukraine) as volunteers,"
said the soldier's mother, named as Svetlana Nikolayevna.
Gazeta.ru
also published a handwritten statement by another soldier, Pavel
Tynchenko, who has been charged with going absent without leave.
In
the statement to the judge of the military tribunal, Tynchenko wrote:
"I did not want to go against the oath I swore and did not want to take
part in military actions in Ukraine."
Gazeta.ru
cited official statistics on Maikop garrison's military tribunal,
saying it convicted 62 soldiers of going AWOL in the first half of 2015.
The
court's website says a soldier from the Maikop unit on Thursday was
convicted of going AWOL and robbery and sentenced to nine months in a
prison colony.
The Kremlin's
rights council, an advisory body, is due to visit Maikop next week and
Chernetskaya said she planned to meet them to raise the soldiers'
trials.
"The number of
witnesses of this state crime (illegally sending soldiers to
participate in an undeclared war) is already such that it is impossible
to conceal them," opposition politician Alexei Navalny wrote on his
blog.
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