"A commander in a war zone does not need to imprison a person, but he needs to force him here and now to go kill and die. Yelena Popova, a Russian soldiers' rights activist, told RFE/RL's Russian Service that the main goal of forcing soldiers to stay in these battlefield holding pens is to "force you to go to the front again." Inquiries to Frolov's listed attorney went unanswered on July 15. He was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison, according to Astra, which cited his relatives and fellow soldiers. RFE/RL was unable to independently confirm that Frolov was held in that cellar for refusing to fight in Ukraine, though the Spassk-Dalny military court's website states he was convicted of insubordination. The video was the latest evidence of more than a dozen such makeshift holding facilities used to allegedly punish Russian soldiers who refused to fight in Ukraine published by Astra, which identified the men in the new video as members of Russia's 60th Separate Motorized Rifle Brigade.įrolov, the soldier convicted of insubordination in a military court in Spassk-Dalny, was among a group of Russian conscripts allegedly held in a similar cellar in the village of Zavitne Bazhannya in Russian-controlled territory of Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, Astra reported. We are just thrown into the woods like dogs," the man adds in the video, which was published by the independent Russian Telegram channel Astra on July 8. There is no equipment, evacuation teams, radios. "There are no commanders that would take us to the front line. "We are locked up in this pit for refusing to go to the front line," a man out of frame can be heard saying in the video, which shows men in camouflage lying in a dank cellar-like room with crumbling walls. The conviction of soldier Yevgeny Frolov in the far-eastern city of Spassk-Dalny on July 13 came days after new video footage emerged purporting to show Russian soldiers in Ukraine placed in captivity for refusing to go to the front line with insufficient equipment and support. A Russian soldier convicted of insubordination was among a group of conscripts who accused their superiors of locking them up in a cellar in eastern Ukraine after they refused to fight, subjecting them to unsanitary living conditions and an insufficient diet, according to a report by an independent Russian news outlet.
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