Exclusive: Russian civilians helping
Assad use military base back home - witnesses
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[April 25, 2018]
By Maria Tsvetkova and Anton Zverev
MOLKINO, Russia (Reuters) - The Kremlin
says it has nothing to do with Russian civilians fighting in Syria but
on three recent occasions groups of men flying in from Damascus headed
straight to a defense ministry base in Molkino, Reuters reporters
witnessed.
Molkino in southwestern Russia is where the Russian 10th Special Forces
Brigade is based, according to information on the Kremlin website.
The destination of the Russians arriving from Syria provides rare
evidence of a covert Russian mission in Syria beyond the air strikes,
training of Syrian forces and small numbers of special forces troops
acknowledged by Moscow.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Feb. 14 Russians may be in Syria
but "they are not part of the armed forces of the Russian Federation".
He referred Reuters to the defense ministry when asked why civilians
fighting in Syria return to a military base. The ministry did not
immediately respond.
A duty officer at the 10th special forces brigade, asked why
non-military people were entering the military base, said: "Nobody
enters it, as far as I am aware ... You’ve seen them, okay. But you
should not believe everything ... You can maybe. But how can we comment
on what other organizations do?"
More than 2,000 Russian contractors are fighting to help Syrian forces
recapture land from their opponents, several sources, including one
contractor, have said.
The contractors are transferred by Syrian airline Cham Wings, the
sources said.
Reuters reporters saw a Syrian Cham Wings charter flight from Damascus
land at the civilian airport in Rostov-on-Don on April 17 and watched
groups of men leave the terminal through an exit separate from the one
used by ordinary passengers.
They boarded three buses, which took them to an area mainly used by
airport staff. A luggage carrier brought numerous oversized bags and the
men, dressed in civilian clothes, got off the buses, loaded the bags and
got back on.
The three buses then left the airport in convoy and headed south; two
made stops near cafes along the way and one on the roadside. All three
reached the village of Molkino, 350 km (220 miles) south, shortly before
midnight.
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A still image from a video footage taken on April 6, 2018 shows a
bus transferring Russian private military contractors passing a
checkpoint before entering the Defence Ministry base in Molkino near
Krasnodar, Russia. REUTERS/Stringer
In the village, each bus paused for a minute or two at a checkpoint
manned by at least two servicemen, before driving on. About 15-20
minutes later the buses drove back through the checkpoint empty.
Publicly available satellite maps show the road leads to the
military facility.
EXCURSION?
The buses took men along the same route from the airport to Molkino
on Mar. 25 and Apr. 6, a Reuters reporter saw.
Several relatives, friends and recruiters of fighters told Reuters
Russian private contractors have had a training camp in Molkino
since the time they fought in eastern Ukraine alongside pro-Russian
separatists.
The military facility is known for its recently renovated firing
range, where the military trains for counter terrorist operations,
tank battles and sniper shooting, the Russian defense ministry
website says.
Reuters contacted the owners of some of the buses transporting the
groups of men from the airport. They said they rent out their buses
but declined to say who to: one said a trip to Molkino could have
been an excursion.
One of the buses, a white 33-year-old Neoplan with a slogan of a
tourist company on its boards, was imported into Russia in 2007 and
initially registered in the town of Pechory. Dmitry Utkin,
identified by three sources as leader of the contractors, previously
commanded a special forces unit based in Pechory.
(Writing by Maria Tsvetkova; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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