First Criminal Case Opened Against Russian Conscripts Refusing to Fight

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The first criminal case against conscripted soldiers refusing to fight in Ukraine has opened in Russia, according to footage circulating on
social media over the weekend.The video shows two soldiers who allegedly refused to go to the frontlines being pulled out of a lineup by
military police, according to the Veteran's Notes Telegram channel
Under Russian law, they face up to three years in jail if they are found guilty of refusing to follow orders.Tatyana Degtyareva confirmed
Sunday to Polygon.Media that her husband Yuri Degtyarev, who was seen in the video, had refused to be deployed as "cannon fodder" on the
front lines.After being called up in September, Degtyarev was sent to Luhansk in eastern Ukraine with "no combat experience" and "no proper
the Luhansk region, his wife said
demonstrative effect," military lawyer Maxim Grebenuk told The Moscow Times, adding that there had been "no need" to detain soldiers at the
military base.Since the beginning of "partial" mobilization in September, reports have emerged of Russian conscripts and their relatives
protesting over the lack of training and equipment provided to soldiers, as well as the fact that new recruits are now being sent into
frontline were sent to "some basement."Around 300 mobilized soldiers were being held in a basement in the village of Zaitseve in the Luhansk
region for refusing to fight, the Astra Telegram channel reported last week, citing relatives.The Russian authorities last month opened a
prosecutors later dropped all charges in what would have been the first criminal case in Russia for draft dodging since the war in Ukraine
began.However, investigators have subsequently said that they intend to appeal the decision of the Prosecutor's Office and expect to
reopen the case, according to human rights lawyer Pavel Chikov.If convicted, the man could face a fine of 200,000 rubles ($3,407) or up to
two years in prison.