
It’s the second time the convicted murderer has been let out of jail in order to fight in Ukraine.
Shortly after the start of the full-scale invasion, Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner mercenary group began recruiting convicts from prisons to fight in Ukraine. If inmates agreed to sign up, they would receive an official pardon from Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Thousands of rapists, murderers and other criminals, including Ivan Rossomakhin, were released from incarceration and sent to the frontlines, where many were killed during brutal assaults on Ukrainian cities such as Bakhmut.
After Prigozhin’s failed mutiny last year, when thousands of Wagner mercenaries marched on Moscow, enlisting inmates from prisons was taken over by the Russian military. The practice was formalised in an official federal law in March this year, and recruitment now appears to be intensifying.
Under the law, convicted criminals who sign up to fight have their remaining sentences suspended for the duration of their military service. Some could even receive an official pardon if they win awards, for example for “bravery” on the battlefield.
The Russian Embassy in London did not respond to a request for comment on the practice of releasing dangerous criminals to fight in Ukraine.
Ukraine has also released some prisoners to fight at the front, though people convicted of murder or sexual offences are not eligible. Ukrainian Deputy Justice Minister Olena Vysotska told the AP news agency earlier this year that up to 3,000 prisoners have joined the military.
A grinding offensive by Russian forces in Ukraine’s Donbas region this year has depleted Moscow’s reserves. The UK Ministry of Defence has estimated that during two months of the operation, Russia lost as many as 70,000 men – that’s an average casualty rate of around 1,000 per day.
Regular recruitment drives are being stepped up, too. In the last year, one-off payments for volunteering to fight have risen steeply. In some cases, men are offered as much as 1.5 million roubles (£12,360) to sign up.
The Kremlin’s willingness to release highly dangerous criminals like Rossomakhin and send them to war indicates that the Russian military desperately needs more recruits.
“It’s obvious there isn’t enough manpower,” Anna says.
“The authorities don’t give a damn about peaceful civilians if they allow people who have committed serious crimes to be exonerated and let out of prison. It tells us that no-one can feel safe in Russia.”
Anna says Rossomakhin’s release means her family are now in extreme danger: “If he comes back he’ll try and take revenge on us – for our efforts to ensure he got a life sentence.
She says she wants to leave the country, and other family members will go into hiding.
“It’s frightening that he’s not the only one. Even if he doesn’t return, how many more murderers and psychopaths are out there walking around?”
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