‘This is a brutal state. We have seen this over the past nine years’
A closer look at Russia recruiting Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians to serve in the army

I recently submitted a new appeal to the draft office where I noted that there is a statement issued by the General Staff that fathers of three children are eligible for military service deferment. They very reluctantly accepted my appeal…”
After the “Crimean Spring” nobody instructed Crimeans to hand in their Ukrainian passports, so people held on to it. Many of them out of principle.
In the nine years since Russia annexed the peninsula, Crimea has become a leader among Russian regions in terms of the number of politically-motivated criminal cases, overtaking North Caucasus regions.
“As a human rights activist, I did commit the sin of not always posting verified information, it was not possible to fact-check it. It was like a wall of information, it was an emotional time. We were also honestly panicking.”
They left in a panic, even those who were not threatened by the draft: people with diabetes, fathers with many children: some had four or five children… Whole families fled. Mostly to Georgia and Kazakhstan.
“I didn’t even serve in the army, and they were ready to take me away. What would I have done there? I probably would have killed myself. Ukrainian guys didn’t do anything to me, why would I shoot at them?”
However, Russian draft officers did not miss the opportunity to enlist Ukrainians still living in Crimea to make them fight for Russia.

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