Conscripts sent to fight by pro-Russia Donbas get little training, old
rifles, poor supplies - sources
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[April 04, 2022]
LONDON (Reuters) - Military
conscripts in the Russian-backed Donbas region have been sent into
front-line combat against Ukrainian troops with no training, little food
and water, and inadequate weapons, six people in the separatist province
told Reuters.
The new accounts of untrained and ill-equipped conscripts being deployed
are a fresh indication of how stretched the military resources at the
Kremlin's disposal are, over a month into a war that has seen Moscow's
forces hobbled by logistical problems and held up by fierce Ukrainian
resistance.
One of the people, a student conscripted in late February, said a fellow
fighter told him to prepare to repel a close-quarter attack by Ukrainian
forces in southwest Donbas but "I don't even know how to fire an
automatic weapon."
The student and his unit fired back and evaded capture, but he was
injured in a later battle. He did not say when the fighting took place.
While some information indicating poor conditions and morale among
Donbas conscripts has emerged in social media and some local media
outlets, Reuters was able to assemble one of the most comprehensive
pictures to date.
Besides the student draftee, Reuters spoke to three wives of conscripts
who have mobile phone contact with their partners, one acquaintance of a
draftee, and one source close to the pro-Russian separatist leadership
who is helping to organize supplies for the Donbas armed forces.
Reuters verified the identity of the student, as well as the other
sources and the draftees they are associated with. The news agency was
unable to confirm independently the accounts of what happened to the men
once they were drafted.
The six sources all asked that their full names not be published, saying
that they feared reprisals for speaking to foreign media.
The Donbas armed forces are fighting alongside Russian soldiers but are
not part of the Russian armed forces, which have different rules about
which troops they send into combat.
Several Donbas draftees have been issued with a rifle called a Mosin,
which was developed in the late 19th century and went out of production
decades ago, according to three people who saw conscripts from the
separatist region using the weapon. Images shared on social media, that
Reuters has not been able to verify independently, also showed Donbas
fighters with Mosin rifles.
The student said he was forced to drink water from a fetid pond because
of lack of supplies. Two other sources in contact with draftees also
told Reuters the men had to drink untreated water.
Some Donbas conscripts were given the highly dangerous mission of
drawing enemy fire onto themselves so other units could identify the
Ukrainian positions and bomb them, according to one of the sources and
video testimony from a prisoner of war published by Ukrainian forces.
Asked to comment about the treatment and low morale of the Donbass
draftees, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was a question for the
Donetsk People's Republic (DNR), the self-proclaimed separatist entity
in Donbas. The Russian defence ministry did not respond to a request for
comment.
A spokeswoman for the DNR administration, after viewing Reuters
questions, said there would be no response on Friday. She did not say
when the administration would reply. Messages left with a spokesman for
the separatist military went unanswered.
After being pushed to the front line near the port of Mariupol -- scene
of the heaviest fighting in the war -- a group of about 135 Donbas
conscripts laid down their arms and refused to fight on, according to
Veronika, the partner of a conscript, who said her husband was among
them. Marina, partner of another conscript, said she had been in contact
with a friend who was part of the same group.
"We're refusing (to fight)," the friend wrote in a text message to
Marina, seen by Reuters.
The men were kept in a basement by military commanders as punishment,
Veronika and Marina said. Commanders verbally threatened them with
reprisals but subsequently allowed the group out of the basement, pulled
them back from the front line and billeted them in abandoned homes,
Veronika said.
Neither the Kremlin nor separatist authorities answered Reuters
questions about the incident.
CALL-UP
All sides in the Ukraine war have systems of conscription, where young
men are required by law to do military service.
Ukraine's government has declared a general mobilisation, meaning that
conscripts and reservists have been deployed to fight.
Russia says it is not deploying conscripts in Ukraine, though it has
acknowledged a small number were mistakenly sent to fight.
The Donetsk separatist authorities announced in late February they were
drafting all fighting age men for immediate deployment.
Military recruitment officers appeared at workplaces around the Donetsk
region and told employees to report for duty, while police ordered
people in the streets to report to their local draft office, according
to a Reuters reporter who was there in late February. Anyone not
complying risks prosecution.
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A local resident rides a bicycle past a charred armoured vehicle
during Ukraine-Russia conflict in the separatist-controlled town of
Volnovakha in the Donetsk region, Ukraine March 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko/File Photo
Reuters could not determine how many
people have been called up, nor what proportion of Donbas forces is
comprised of draftees.
None of the five draftees had prior military experience or training,
and four of the five were given no training before they were sent
into combat, according to the injured draftee, the three wives of
conscripted men, and the acquaintance.
"He never served in the army," said one of the
partners, who gave her name as Olga and lives in the town of
Makeevka. "He doesn't even really know how to hold an automatic
weapon."
Two of the wives said their partners were deployed to the front
line, where they saw heavy fighting.
"I'm in the war," read a text message, seen by Reuters, that Marina,
also from Makeevka, said came from her drafted husband.
Marina said she learned from messages from her
husband that his unit, fighting in the Donbas region, was ordered to
draw enemy fire on to themselves.
Ukrainian forces on March 12 published a video showing a prisoner of
war. He said his name was Ruslan Khalilov, that he was a civil
servant from Donbas and that he was sent with zero training to
Mariupol where his role was to draw enemy fire to facilitate the
bombing of Ukrainian targets.
A person in Donbas who knows Khalilov confirmed to Reuters his
identity, that he was drafted and has no military training. Reuters
established that the person knows Khalilov.
"SLAUGHTERHOUSE"
The student draftee who spoke to Reuters said that a day after
reporting for duty he was put in a mortar unit then sent towards the
fighting. "We were taught nothing," he wrote to Reuters via
messenger app.
"Up to that point I had only seen mortars in movies. Obviously, I
didn't know how to do anything with them."
He said that before he left, his unit had been under repeated attack
by Ukrainian troops. "There were lots of casualties," he wrote. "I
hate the war. I don't want it, curse it. Why are they sending me
into a slaughterhouse?"
All the accounts gathered by Reuters mentioned an acute shortage of
supplies. The sources described little or no safe drinking water,
field rations for one man being shared among several, and units
having to scavenge food.
"We drank water with dead frogs in it," said the student conscript.
"Supplies for the soldiers right now are a disaster," said the
source close to the Donetsk separatist leadership, who spoke on
condition of anonymity.
Neither the Kremlin nor the separatist authorities replied to
Reuters’ questions about supplies and equipment for the draftees
from Donbas.
WORLD WAR TWO RIFLE
The same source said some conscripts were issued with the Mosin
rifle from reserve stocks that date back to the Second World War.
The student conscript said he has seen fellow fighters using the
rifle: "It's like we're fighting with World War Two muskets."
A soldier in the Russian armed forces who is fighting near Mariupol
told Reuters he had seen soldiers from the Donetsk separatist
military carrying Mosin rifles.
A video posted on social media on Tuesday by Russian military
journalist Semyon Pegov showed a man who said he was a Donbas
draftee brandishing a Mosin rifle.
Soon after the men were drafted in late February, many of their
wives, mothers, and sisters started writing petitions to the
separatist leadership, to Donbas draft offices, and to the Kremlin,
describing their treatment and seeking help.
"Bring us back our men," said one petition addressed to Russian
President Vladimir Putin, seen by Reuters.
The three wives of draftees who spoke to Reuters said they received
no definitive answers.
On March 11, about 100 women gathered outside the separatist
administration’s offices in Donetsk to demand answers, in a rare
public show of dissent.
Two women who took part in the gathering said Alexander Malkovsky,
the head of the DNR draft office, came out and told them that men
aged 18 to 27 would be exempted from the draft. Reuters couldn't
determine if this has been implemented, and was unable to reach
Malkovsky.
Two of the conscripts' wives said that since the gathering they
learned from their partners that conditions had improved: some units
were pulled back from the front line and allowed to sleep in
abandoned homes, instead of in trenches.
(Editing by Daniel Flynn)
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