Catching flak
What became of the Russian conscripts who denounced the poor conditions they faced in Ukraine?

On September 21, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the first mobilisation of the country’s military reserve since World War II, allowing the Defence Ministry to draft over 300,000 men into its ranks to bolster the flagging Russian offensive in Ukraine.
For many mobilised soldiers, basic training at poorly prepared and under-equipped military bases turned out to be a fiasco, problems which only worsened once units were deployed to Ukraine. In the face of official indifference and inaction when confronted with serious issues such as lack of food, violent beatings, and poor and sometimes non-existent training, draftees resorted to posting videos they made online decrying the degrading treatment and dangerous neglect they faced.
A full year since the mobilisation order was issued, what became of some of the better known cases of conscripts making desperate public appeals for help?
Later, the battalion was transferred to a unit in Baranykivka, where they were forced to sleep in a building with no heating or glass in the windows.
One soldier advised any comrades watching to address complaints directly to their commanding officers rather than attempting to go over their heads.
They also reported that Donetsk militia commanders shot at them with machine guns when they refused to join its assault units.

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