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Thread: Ukraine: Russo-Ukr War (June-December 2015)

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Exclusive: Mother urges Russia not to abandon son captured in Ukraine

    Reuters

    By Maria Tsvetkova
    It does not speak well of a countries' leaders when they openly abandon their own elite soldiers.

    Have noticed a markedly decrease in the effectiveness of Spetsnaz attacks on Ukrainian positions--can it be that the abandonment of one of their own is giving them second thoughts?

    Ukrainian units have been rather successful in defending themselves against Spetsnaz attacks.

    youtube.com/watch?v=CXjKDIyNlx0 …
    Intense Avdiivka encounter. Ukrainian paratroopers v. Russian recon&sabotage unit. pic.twitter.com/9vgShQ00yk
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 06-25-2015 at 06:43 PM.

  2. #2
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    This was a critical decision----only took over a year for this….

    PACE officially recognized the fact of Russian aggression in Ukraine
    pic.twitter.com/04i4APPFKG http://liveuamap.com/en/2015/25-june...ian-aggression

    Frontline action in #Shyrokyne from Babylon 13 / Spirit of the Nation https://youtu.be/HG-PCE5n87c via

    20:59 #Mariupol @sir_T_Lawrence Cannonade lasts, waiting for UKR reply

    21:00 #Mariupol @PVB40 [fb] "Not quiet yet"

    Militants have fired at Ukrainian positions 35 times during the day - press center of ATO pic.twitter.com/nB58L73q6j http://liveuamap.com/en/2015/25-june...tions-35-times

    VIDEO Busy cross section in Donetsk where Russian T-72 come and go.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2PGtwm12wU
    https://www.google.com/maps/@48.0423.../data=!3m1!1e3

    #Footage
    6 Russian invasion T-64BV during training in #Luhansk province.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHe_XR_jGEQ
    pic.twitter.com/NYbi3MeL9b

    And Russia's Hybrid Army keeps training and training in Ukraine.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHe_XR_jGEQ

  3. #3
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    Kiselev was LPR Deputy Defence Minister. Now "Deputy Commander of the Second Army Corps" LPR armed forces. Whatever. pic.twitter.com/i2h9BVGpUP

    Revisiting #Ukraine city of Ilovaisk, scene of horrific massacre in August
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv...st-392011.html … pic.twitter.com/M8e7ohOCp7

    youtube.com/watch?v=ciRMhxVBUbk … Fr #Saratov, #Russia, in #Ukraine to finish 'Nazi Merika,' 'unfinished business since 1945' pic.twitter.com/Q2BiXAdRyd

    Russian military base in Stakhanov pic.twitter.com/iLVdB3ckJz http://liveuamap.com/en/2015/25-june...e-in-stakhanov

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    https://meduza.io/en/feature/2015/06...ns-and-bribery

    Drugs, guns and bribery Russian crime rate on the rise as volunteer fighters return from eastern Ukraine

    Last year in November, three senior lieutenants from Russia’s traffic police were killed near a town called Perepechino just outside of Moscow. They had stopped an SUV, and the people in the car had opened fire. The killers took the police car’s video camera and fled the scene. A search was announced. It turned out that all of them had participated in fighting alongside the separatists in eastern Ukraine, and none of them have been apprehended. This is the most famous case of war returnees finding themselves on the wrong side of the law, and there are other cases like it. Meduza asked Ilya Rozhdestvensky to sift through the Interior Ministry’s statistics and dozens of court cases from the last year and a half and explain how former fighters for the Ukrainian separatists have been keeping themselves busy since they came home to Russia.
    ♦ ♦ ♦

    Since April 2015, the number of recorded crimes in Russia has grown by 2.5 percent. Russia’s Southern Federal District holds the dubious honor of the biggest increases. In Rostov Region, the number of recorded crimes increased by 23.4 percent, in Adygea by 19.2 percent. Kalmykia and Volgograd Regions have seen increases of 7.8 percent, and Krasnodar has seen crime increase by 10.4 percent. Crime has fallen only in Astrakhan region (by 8 percent). In 2014, all crime figures were far more modest, with only Krasnodar seeing an increase by 7.5 percent that year. The other regions with the biggest crime increases this year weren’t even among the top 15 most criminal regions in 2014.

    Judging by these statistics, the Southern Federal District’s proximity to Donbas, the war-torn breakaway region of Ukraine, may be taking its toll. Fighting has gradually subsided following the battle for Debaltseve in January and February of 2015, and Russian supporters of the Ukrainian self-proclaimed republics are trickling home, taking their weapons with them. This is obvious from the sheer number of weapons caches found in Rostov region in Russia. Grenades and other weapons are now being used by criminals as a form of currency.

    ***

    The most popular crime committed by returning volunteers is the illegal weapons trade. For example, in mid-February 2015, a local court in Rostov Region sentenced a Russian citizen, listed in the documents as G.I. Appelgants, to three years behind bars. A few months earlier, Appelganets was found to be in possession of an impressive arsenal: two AK-74 assault rifles, a Dragunov sniper rifle, a single-shot GP-25 underbarrel grenade launcher, and about 1,000 rounds of 5.45mm ammunition. Appelgants pled guilty, but asked for leniency, as he had brought humanitarian aid to the people of Donbas, and had taken part as a volunteer in military operations on the territory of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic. The judge, Levon Melkonyan, did not consider this a mitigating factor. A man named S.S. Zakayev, who had fought in the ranks of the Donetsk People’s Republic, was slightly less well-equipped: a search revealed he had an AKS-74 with an underbarrel grenade launcher and about 250 rounds of ammunition. The judge at Matveyevo-Kurgan Court, Nadezhda Gritsenko, sentenced Zakayev to three years and one month behind bars.

    The most common weapon found in possession of separatist fighters returning to the motherland is the Makarov pistol. This was the case with a man named A.O. Bokovoi, who was stopped at a traffic checkpoint. When he was searched, police found he had not only a pistol and ammunition, but also detonators and 11 grenades. Bokovoi himself said that he planned to go to St Petersburg to buy uniforms for his comrades. In court, the accused stated that if he had known he had grenades in his bag, he would not have brought them with him across the border; instead, he would have turned back and given them to the separatists. Bokovoi was sentenced to three years in jail. As he read the sentence, Judge Leonid Stepanenko did not fail to mention the motivation of the accused: “He joined the ranks of the militia to fight fascism, as he didn’t want fascists to reach the territory of Belarus and Russia.”

    In May 2015, this same judge was handed the case of K.K. Pilipenko. The accused maintained that he was bringing humanitarian aid to the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic, however, when his car was searched, a box of detonators was found. Pilipenko got an 18 month suspended sentence and was later amnestied. At the hearing, a witness testified that Pilipenko was helping a Lugansk People’s Republic battalion, which was allegedly stationed on Russian territory at the time.

    A man named Muravyov was also caught trafficking a Makarov pistol. Standing before Sergei Kopylov, a judge at a local Rostov court, he never actually denied the charges. He said that he was a member of the separatist militia and his duties included bringing in cargo and medical supplies. While military operations were underway in Donetsk, he was given a weapon and body armor. He crossed the Russian border on more than one occasion to bring insulin to back to the city. In order to bring in humanitarian aid, he always got permission from an FSB lieutenant colonel fist. The judge took the fact that Muravyov was in the Donetsk People’s Republic militia into account, and thus reduced his charges, sentencing him to four months in a medium security prison.

    ***

    Service in the ranks of the Donetsk People’s Republic and Lugansk People’s Republic is one of the main mitigating factors pleaded by former separatists who claimed they were innocent. For example, S.E. Vakulenko, who practically started a full-blown brawl on the streets of the city of Taganrog, declared in court that he wouldn’t admit his guilt as he had “accidentally crossed the Russian border, hadn’t used bad language and was a militia member in the Donetsk People’s Republic.” It’s hard to say why he decided these factors would affect his sentence positively, but Judge Mikhail Dzyuba wasn’t convinced, and jailed Vakulenko for seven days. A certain A.L. (mentioned in the records only by initials) also didn’t manage to convince a judge in Kusyovshaya Court. He was accused of possession of nine grams of cannabis. He maintained that he should be released for a number of reasons, including the fact that he had taken part in the fighting on the territory of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic and was wounded in the right forearm and left testicle.

    Some former separatists have had more luck beyond Rostov Region. E.V. Venediktov managed to convince a Novgorod court that he had actively helped the people of eastern Ukraine and brought them humanitarian aid. Venediktov still plead guilty to possession of cannabis and got a three-year suspended sentence. A.P. Volkov told a judge that he had exceeded the speed limit by 80 kilometers per hour as he was rushing to bring medicine to eastern Ukraine. Ultimately, he had to pay a fine of 5,000 rubles ($95), but was allowed to keep his license.

    Another incident on the roads ended much more spectacularly. In mid-February 2015, a Kamaz truck drove straight through a barrier at a checkpoint on the Ukraine-Russia border into Russia. Russian OMON riot police and Rostov’s FSB secret services chased the truck. They opened fire on the tires, but managed to stop the truck only in a place where the road had been blocked off by another large vehicle (or, according to some reports, an armored personnel carrier). The three people arrested turned out to be under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs. They stated that they were militia members though one later claimed he had been their captive, which surprised the law enforcement agents as they had never seen a captive so thoroughly armed to the teeth before. The fate of the three men is unknown.

    A Ukrainian citizen, A.M. Badei, also had a run-in with law enforcement. In early May of 2015, he tried to cross the River Kamenka in his car to enter Russian territory. He failed to do this, however, as he was spotted by FSB border guards. They blocked the path of his vehicle and opened fire. After warning shots failed to stop the car, which nearly drove into the guards, they shot out its tires. As a result, Badei put the car in reverse and returned to Ukrainian territory. Later, the Lugansk People’s Republic police recommended he go to a border crossing to try and smooth out the situation. Upon arrival, Badei was arrested and brought before a magistrate, where he was sentenced to 10 days in jail.

    ***

    Drug-related crime is also “popular” among former separatists. Aside from the cases of E.V. Venediktov and A.L. mentioned above, our investigation covered several other interesting cases. For example, in January, a Donetsk People’s Republic fighter known as E.V. Kulikov, finding himself in the town of Matveyev-Kurgan in Rostov Region, went into a cafe, bought juice, and consumed desomorphine, a cocktail of cannabis and amphetamines known by the street name “Krokodil.” This led to Kulikov spending five days in jail.

    Things ended on a far more negative note for S.N. Pivnev, who was found in possession of 1.79 grams of N-Methylphenylamine, а designer drug with effects similar to amphetamine. He told detectives that he had bought drugs for the first time in his life. He had come back from the Lugansk People’s Republic where he had been fighting; he had seen his friend die right before his eyes and had watched a car full of people explode. “He experienced massive psychological trauma. He was unable to find peace, and, at the advice of acquaintances, he acquired the substance for his own personal use,” reads the final statement of the Kirov Court in Omsk. Pivnev received 18 months in prison.

    CONTINUED................

  5. #5
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    VIDEO One of the underground blown-up bunkers of Donetsk Chemical Factory.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOKqzdZ7C6E

    Serbian DPR-sniper Dejan Beric about @OSCE director Dačić: he is Serbian, ours... He has driven Serbia into war. pic.twitter.com/uH1eGJr5Or

    Guardian columnist Jonathan Steele plays useful idiot on RT.
    https://youtu.be/BtBufgfdw3c pic.twitter.com/uqg65cZfdn

    Source interview with Serbian sniper Dejan Beric: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFohWduwU5c

    youtube.com/watch?v=qUDTtiitYPo … #Russian paratroopers laugh at APC parachute fail/possible deaths at Ulan-Ude,#Russia,drills pic.twitter.com/uOW5kDBKMM

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