From the BBC:
“Stop
fighting in Ukraine: Russian soldier's mum speaks out”
(Photos of
Valya's son have been deliberately edited to disguise his identity)
On 20
February, Valya received a call from her son in the Russian army. His unit was
"on exercises" near the Ukrainian border. "He said they were
doing firing practice and living in tents," Valya tells me. "That was
the last time I spoke to him." Four days later, Russian troops invaded
Ukraine. Russia's offensive has brought untold suffering to its neighbour.
Since President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion, thousands of civilians
have been killed in Ukraine. But back home, there are consequences too, for the
families of Russian servicemen who have been sent into battle.
Valya is not
her real name. Fearing repercussions from the authorities for speaking out, the
mother has asked us to conceal her identity. But she's keen to share her story.
She wants to talk to us about her son and what she thinks of the Kremlin's
"special military operation". "At the beginning of March, a
sergeant telephoned me from my son's base. He probably called all the
parents," she says. "He told me the lads are fine, that they're in
contact with them every day. We kept in touch throughout March and he kept
saying that they were fine. "Then a man claiming to be a friend of my son
sent me a message. I didn't know him. He found me on social media. He told me
my son's leg had been blown off and that he was dead. I made lots of calls and
tried to meet officials. But no one could tell me anything. "Eventually
the sergeant I'd been talking with said to me: 'Your son last made contact on
23 February.' "'So why have you been calling [to say everything is fine]?
Just to calm us down?' "'Sorry, I'm only a sergeant,' he'd said."
(Valya's son
was on military exercises near the Ukrainian border in the run-up to the
invasion)
Valya tried to
find out more. "I wrote to my son's unit," she recalls. "I wrote
to the military district office. I wrote to the Defence Ministry. And then I
wrote to them all again. "No-one has given me the basic information:
where, when and how my son disappeared. All I've been told is that he was
taking part in the 'special military operation' and that he is missing." How
many Russian servicemen have been killed in Ukraine? It is a criminal offence
in Russia to report anything other than the official figures. But official
figures are hard to come by. Russia's defence ministry hasn't updated the
official military death toll since 25 March. Back then, it stood at 1,351
Russian soldiers killed. The following month, the Kremlin admitted
"significant" troop losses in Ukraine. In an effort to justify the
invasion, the Russian authorities and state media attempt to dehumanise
Ukrainians in the eyes of the Russian public. They denounce Ukrainian soldiers
and officials as "ultra-nationalists" and "Nazis". They
claim that Ukraine is the aggressor, and Russia the liberator. But Valya does
not see Ukraine as the enemy.
"If our
country had been attacked like this, we would also be defending ourselves, like
they are. We'd defend ourselves and we would be angry, too," she says. Many
Russians do believe the official government line and support the "special
military operation", as it is presented to them on state TV. In Russia the
Kremlin controls TV and, therefore, the messaging. But not completely. Valya is
in contact with soldiers' mothers across Russia. She claims that among mothers
there is growing resentment towards the authorities over who is being sent to
fight in Ukraine. "They hate the government. They hate Putin," Valya
tells me. "They all want this war to end. All the mothers do. "We're
the lowest class. We're simple country folk. All the lads doing the fighting
are from remote regions of Russia. Not Muscovites. There are no sons of
government officials there. "If the mothers of all the soldiers there now,
and the mothers who've lost sons, if they all rose up, can you imagine how big
that army would be? And they will. Their nerves will snap. "Stop. Stop all
this. Stop it and protect our children." Since speaking with us, Valya has
received official notification that her son was killed in Ukraine. One more
Russian soldier who won't be returning home.
^ Sadly, it
will take more and more Mothers, Girlfriends and Wives questioning Putin and
his War in Ukraine before the vats majority of Russians call for an end to all
the death and destruction in Ukraine being done by them and in their name. ^
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