After deadly Syrian battle, evidence of
Russian losses was obscured
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[February 05, 2019]
By Maria Tsvetkova and Anton Zverev
YELENOVSKOYE, Russia (Reuters) - The last
contact Grigoriy Gancherov and his wife had with their son, a Russian
private military contractor fighting in Syria, was on Feb. 4 last year.
The father subsequently learned from a friend and fellow fighter of
Sergei's that the 25-year-old had died several days later in a major
battle against U.S.-led forces in the Deir al-Zor region.
It was not until mid-April that he received formal notification of his
son's death and the body was returned, accompanied by a death
certificate stating he died on March 7 on the other side of Syria.
Gancherov's account is one of half a dozen instances Reuters has
identified where the Kremlin-linked private military organization that
recruited the fighters returned bodies more than seven weeks after the
battle and with official documents bearing details that people who knew
them say were incorrect.
According to relatives and a battlefield witness, the fighters all died
in the clash in Syria's Deir al-Zor region, which took place overnight
on Feb. 7.
Such practices, an unusual pattern for Russian fighters killed in Syria,
would have helped conceal heavy casualties until after President
Vladimir Putin’s re-election in mid-March.
Moscow's message at the time was that the military campaign in Syria was
a success with only modest human cost.
That details are emerging nearly a year after the Deir al-Zor battle
indicates that Moscow may struggle to control its message about
casualties abroad at a time when it is expanding its military activities
in the Middle East and Africa.
NEW GRAVESTONE
About 100 Russian military contractors were killed in the Deir al-Zor
battle, sources have said. The Russian foreign ministry has said that
only a handful of Russian citizens were killed there and dismissed
reports of heavy losses.
Sergei Gancherov and his friend were standing near each other shortly
before their position was hit, according to the account the friend gave
to the father.
The friend, who was wounded, told the father he learned about
Gancherov's death on a medical evacuation plane on his way back to
Russia.
Reuters was unable to speak to the friend or verify his account.
Grigoriy Gancherov plans to replace the wooden cross that bears the date
recorded in his son's official death certificate with a gravestone
marked with the date of the Deir al-Zor battle.
That was the first direct confrontation between the United States and
Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union. It was also the only
known battle in Syria in the early part of last year where Russian
military contractors took part.
Yet in each of the six instances identified by Reuters where fighters
were returned to families after the election, the death certificates,
issued by Russian officials in Syria, stated they died in late February
or March.
Several relatives of those fighters said the recruiters who informed
them about their family member's death told them not to disclose the
circumstances.
The Kremlin declined to comment on Gancherov's death or that of the
other fighters. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was wrong to suggest
authorities postponed issuing death certificates of Russians killed in
Syria because of the election.
On whether death certificates issued by Russian officials contained
incorrect information, Peskov said it wasn't a question for the Kremlin.
He added that he didn't know whether there was a delay in returning the
bodies.
The defense ministry and the ministry of foreign affairs did not respond
to requests for comment.
As Reuters has reported, Russia secretly used private military
contractors in Syria to carry out missions in support of Syrian
president Bashar al-Assad, Moscow's ally, in coordination with the
Russian military.
The organization that recruited the fighters, known as Wagner group,
uses defense ministry transport infrastructure and hospitals. Russia
denies using military contractors in Syria and says any Russian
civilians there are volunteers.
Peskov could not confirm whether the Wagner group operates in Syria or
carries out missions on behalf of the Russian government.
A person Reuters understands to be close to the Wagner group commander
did not respond to requests for comment.
HUGE AIR ASSAULT
On Feb. 7 last year, Russian fighters advanced toward an oil refinery in
Deir al-Zor province held by Kurdish forces and the U.S.-led coalition,
which responded with heavy air strikes.
A military contractor who said he survived by taking cover identified
among the many dead he saw two of the six fighters who were returned to
families after the election with official documents bearing later dates
of death.
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A view of the grave of Russian private military contractor
Konstantin Danilogorsky, killed in Syria, at a cemetery in Kirov,
Russia November 27, 2018. REUTERS/Maria Tsvetkova
Colleagues told him the delay was because of the large number of
deaths and because journalists were monitoring an airport in
Rostov-on-Don, in southern Russia, which was a key staging post for
the private military firm.
"It was difficult to deliver all of them at once because reporters
were waiting for them in Rostov, meeting planes, as we were told,"
said the fighter.
He said he did not want to be identified because his recruiters did
not allow him to disclose information related to his assignment in
Syria.
Reuters reporters spent several days after the February battle
monitoring a military morgue and airport in Rostov. They did not see
coffins arriving.
According to the fighter, one of the dead colleagues he saw was
Anton Vazhov from the southern Russian town of Novoshakhtinsk, whose
official records say he died on March 21.
He said he saw Vazhov in a body bag on Feb. 8 upon returning to the
battlefield after the air strikes to collect the dead.
"When we turned him over on his back and blew away the dust, we
identified him," the fighter said, adding that he drove Vazhov away
from the battlefield in the back of a truck with more than 20 other
bodies.
FEAR OF REPRISALS
In the region of Kirov, 800 km north-east of Moscow, lie the graves
of three fighters whose bodies were returned to families in early
April, according to people who knew them.
The fighter who survived the battle said one of the three men,
Alexander Lusnikov, was also among the dead he collected from the
Deir al-Zor battlefield.
Lusnikov's official records indicate he died on March 1, according
to a relative who has viewed the death certificate.
Another relative, Viktor Dumin, the brother of Lusnikov's ex-wife,
said the fighter told him about the circumstances of the death.
"Once the president had been elected, it all came to light," Dumin
told Reuters at the cemetery where Lusnikov is buried.
Neither of the two other military contractors - Alexei Kalabukhov
and Konstantin Danilogorsky – had contacted their families since the
battle, a childhood friend said. After learning about the battle,
their wives tried to contact them but couldn’t reach them, the
friend added.
Their graves say they died on Feb. 27 – the date the death
certificates carry, according to a person familiar with the details.
The brother of another fighter from a town in the western part of
Russia said he learned about his sibling's death in Deir al-Zor in
mid-February from an acquaintance in touch with the contractors in
Syria, even though the death certificate said he died weeks later.
He asked not to mention their names saying he feared reprisals.
SURGE IN REGISTERED DEATHS
The belated return of bodies and incorrect documents described by
friends and relatives last spring contrasts to the normal sequence
observed by Reuters over a period of two years.
Typically, recruiters return a body to a family two or three weeks
after a death, accompanied by a death certificate bearing a date of
death that usually tallies with what relatives know from fellow
fighters.
The Russian consulate in Syria is responsible for registering the
death of Russian civilians killed in the country. Each death
certificate carries a serial number, starting from one at the
beginning of the year.
Russian officials at the consulate issued more than 60 death
certificates in the first part of last year through April 8,
according to documents seen by Reuters. At least 33 of those were
between March 22 and April 8. The election was on March 18.
The Russian consulate in Syria didn't respond to requests for
comment. Reuters was unable to establish whether all those
certificates were for private military contractors.
(Editing by Cassell Bryan-Low)
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