********************  POSTING RULES & NOTES  ********************
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
*****************************************************************

Conscripts' Relatives Fear They'll Be Sent to Ukraine Amid Alleged Coercion
By Sergei Chernov
Jan. 29 2015
The Moscow Times

ST. PETERSBURG  — Russian army conscripts are being tricked or pressured
into signing up to become contract soldiers, human rights groups say — and
their relatives fear that once they turn professional, they run the risk of
being secretly dispatched to fight in eastern Ukraine.

Soldiers' Mothers of St. Petersburg, an NGO that battles to uphold the
rights of Russian military personnel and their relatives, said it had
received a number of complaints regarding a military unit in Kamenka, a
village in the Vyborg district of the Leningrad region, around 100
kilometers northwest of St. Petersburg. Soldiers' relatives called the
organization's hotline, submitted complaints by e-mail and also came to its
offices to file written reports, the NGO said. No state agency has either
confirmed or denied the reported information, and the Western Military
District's press service declined to comment immediately on the matter when
called Thursday.

"When you see the news [about the conflict in eastern Ukraine] these days,
it breaks your heart," said Irina, who asked to be identified only by her
first name to protect her identity and that of her nephew, who is serving
in Kamenka and who she said refused to sign a contract when ordered to
earlier this month.

"They were assembled together in a room and told to sign contracts," Irina
told The Moscow Times by phone on Tuesday.

"No physical force was used against them, of course, but there was
psychological pressure. […] They were told, 'If you sign the contract,
you'll be paid more.' Obviously, they were not told it had anything to do
with events in Ukraine."

Another soldier's father, who asked to be referred to only by his first
name, Alexei, said his son, who was called up in June to perform his
military service in Kamenka, signed up for the professional army in
December.

"No explanation was given; he was told 'You must sign it,'" Alexei told The
Moscow Times by phone on Tuesday.

"He was on assignment in the Tver region for three months, and when they
came back, that same day or the next, their squadron was assembled in a
room, handed out contracts and told to sign them. They were promised that
the contracts would only be valid for the same duration as their national
service."

According to Alexei, no pressure was exerted on the soldiers in his son's
case. "He just bought it, [they were obedient] like a flock of sheep, and
signed everything."

Under Duress

A written report from one of the parents of a soldier named Vladimir
serving in Kamenka and submitted to the Soldiers' Mothers of St. Petersburg
— which was added to the "foreign agent" list of NGOs by the Justice
Ministry on Aug. 28 — says that he was "forced to sign a contract by means
of threats and insults."

Several e-mails from soldiers' relatives sent to Soldiers' Mothers of St.
Petersburg and seen by The Moscow Times this week, with the senders' names
redacted, describe similar situations in Kamenka.

One says that a conscript who had signed an army contract found that his
military ID contained no record that he was now serving on contract, while
he and his fellow soldiers who had signed the contracts were told they
would be sent on Feb. 9 for military exercises for three months to the
Rostov region, which borders Ukraine.

Numerous reports have claimed that Russian soldiers have been sent across
the border into eastern Ukraine to bolster the efforts of pro-Russian
separatists fighting government troops there. The Kremlin has repeatedly
denied the allegations, insisting that any Russian troops fighting in
Ukraine are there as volunteers.

Another e-mail alleges that an officer blackmailed soldiers into signing
contracts.

"We were told that we would be labeled traitors of the motherland and shot
if war breaks out. That they would alter our military records so that we
would never be able to get a job," the letter said. Another message,
apparently concerning the same person, said that 10 other soldiers had
signed contracts following the threats.

False Pretenses

According to Soldiers' Mothers of St. Petersburg spokesperson Alexander
Peredruk, the shortest term for a service contract under Russian
legislation is two years, so the soldiers were apparently deceived when
they were told that they would not have to serve as professional soldiers
any longer than they would have as draftees. Compulsory military service in
Russia lasts for one year.

Aside from pressure, soldiers are also lured into signing contracts by
promises of higher wages: at least 20,000 rubles ($295) a month for
contract soldiers compared with 2,000 rubles a month for conscripts,
Peredruk said. Other benefits include bonuses, accommodation in a hostel
rather than in barracks, and days off over the weekend, he said.

Peredruk said the soldiers become easier to manipulate once they sign
contracts, even if their status does not change much from a legal
perspective.

"No one is told that they will go to Ukraine. Officially they go [south]
for military exercises, and then it depends," he said.

"For instance, if we recall the story of [20-year-old contract soldier]
Anton Tumanov, he originally went [to the Rostov region] for military
exercises and somehow ended up on the territory of Ukraine, where he was
killed [in August]. … Officially, Russia is not involved in any combat
action [in Ukraine], and if anybody goes there, they supposedly do so
voluntarily; no one has the right to order them there by law, regardless of
whether they are conscripts or contract soldiers."

Raising the Alarm

Boris Vishnevsky, a deputy for the liberal Yabloko party in the St.
Petersburg Legislative Assembly, wrote a formal letter on Jan. 23 to the
Western Military District's military prosecutor Artur Yegiyev.

In his letter, Vishnevsky wrote that a number of parents of soldiers
believe that their sons may be sent to Ukraine after being transferred to
the 138th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade. Vishnevsky asked Yegiyev to look into
the reports and to take measures to prevent soldiers from being pressured
into signing contracts, as well as from being sent to participate in combat
action in Ukraine.

"Everything seems to indicate that what is happening in Kamenka is not an
isolated case," Vishnevsky told The Moscow Times on Tuesday.

"I received similar reports from the north [of Russia]. We are talking
about people being forced to sign contracts, about soldiers being
dispatched to Ukraine, and moreover we are talking about how they [senior
military personnel] then get sent coffins from there and write some totally
crazy causes of death on the death certificates, such as a training grenade
exploding in their hands."

No Proof

Vishnevsky added, however, that he had yet to obtain any documented proof
to back up the claims made in the phone calls and conversations.

"It's obvious that people won't give their names because they are scared,
but I am waiting for at least some concrete facts, names and numbers of
military units, so that I can file a formal appeal," he said.

In Pechenga, a village 170 kilometers west of Murmansk in Russia's extreme
northwest, about 70 soldiers were reportedly coerced in November into
signing contracts, the Murmansk region's Soldiers' Mothers legal counsel,
Irina Paikachyova, told The Moscow Times by phone on Wednesday.

According to Paikachyova, the soldiers were promised that they would be
free to terminate their contracts without any penalty after serving for
three months, and were then sent "to the south," after which they were
allowed to go home for a brief unofficial vacation before returning to
their unit in late January.

However, she said, the contracts have not been terminated, and the soldiers
reportedly continued to live and serve in the same conditions as conscripts
— with the exception that for the two or three months that they were away
from their barracks, they allegedly received 25,000 rubles a month.

Paikachyova said that their assignment could have included combat action in
eastern Ukraine.

"This is how they put it, word for word: 'We were ***there***, too,'" said
Paikachyova.

Fear of Reprisals

Lyudmila Ivakhnina of the human rights advocacy organization Memorial in
Moscow said that pressuring conscripts to sign professional contracts
appears to be a "massive" practice in Russia. Speaking to The Moscow Times
by phone Thursday, Ivakhnina said that few human rights groups are prepared
to publish information about the issue out of fear of reprisals being taken
against the soldiers whose relatives turn to them.

In addition, human rights groups themselves do not feel safe, Ivakhnina
said, citing pressure on activists who reported the deaths of Russian
soldiers allegedly killed in Ukraine.

Lyudmila Bogatenkova, head of the Soldiers' Mothers Committee in Stavropol,
was detained in October and charged with embezzlement after passing on
information about nine contract soldiers reportedly killed in Ukraine to
the Presidential Human Rights Council. And Pskov-based Yabloko lawmaker Lev
Shlosberg was attacked and badly beaten in August following his report
about a secret funeral for soldiers from the 76th Guards Air Assault
Division at a cemetery near Pskov.

As a result, of five organizations that have reported — via human rights
advocacy channels — cases of conscripts being forced to sign contracts,
three asked not to be named in the media, Ivakhnina said.

However, when soldiers are persistent and not afraid, they have a chance of
winning, even if only one case of legal action being taken over forced
contract signing is known in Russia so far, she said.

A soldier from Perm — referred to in a report by the regional ombudsman as
Private K. for his own safety — was pressured to sign a contract after
completing his compulsory military service in August. Instead, he left his
military unit based in Tula and reported the situation to Perm ombudsman
Tatyana Margolina and received legal assistance in filing a lawsuit against
his unit. In October, he won his case when the Tula Garrison Military Court
ruled that the actions of his commanders had been illegal.
_________________________________________________________
Full posting guidelines at: http://www.marxmail.org/sub.htm
Set your options at: 
http://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to