“We have already caught more than 30,000 (immigrants) who received citizenship and did not want to register for military service,” said a Kremlin official.
Russia has so far conscripted and sent around 10,000 naturalised men to fight in its more than two-year-long war against Ukraine, a senior official said on Thursday.
Russia conscripted 10,000 immigrants to fight Ukraine war: Official
“We have already caught more than 30,000 (immigrants) who received citizenship and did not want to register for military service,” said a Kremlin official.
NEWS AGENCY OF NIGERIA • JUNE 27, 2024
Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine[Credit: Atlantic Council]
Russia has so far conscripted and sent around 10,000 naturalised men to fight in its more than two-year-long war against Ukraine, a senior official said on Thursday.
“We have already caught more than 30,000 (immigrants) who received citizenship and did not want to register for military service, and sent about 10,000 of them to the special military operation zone,’’ the head of the Russian Investigative Committee, Alexander Bastrykin, said at the St Petersburg Lawyers’ Forum.
Mr Bastrykin was a fellow student of President Vladimir Putin and is considered a close confidant of the Kremlin chief.
According to Mr Bastrykin, the conscripted men were primarily responsible for digging trenches and building fortifications.
“You need really strong hands for that,’’ he said.
In recent months, the security forces repeatedly carried out raids on businesses with migrant labourers, primarily from the post-Soviet states in Central Asia.
Russian media reported that those who already received Russian passports were then often forcibly recruited.
Others were promised an easier naturalisation process if sent to the front.
According to Mr Putin, a total of 700,000 Russian soldiers are currently on the front line in Ukraine.
Some of these were recruited in a partial mobilisation in autumn 2022.
As the measure was unpopular, the Kremlin wanted to avoid further waves of mobilisation and find other ways to replenish heavy battlefield losses.