Spiral of violence
Pardoning violent criminals for military service in Ukraine is freeing them to reoffend

In a bid to make military service more appealing, the Russian president has been pardoning violent criminals who have served on the front line in Ukraine, seemingly indifferent to the anxiety this causes for their victims or the danger posed to society by such indiscriminate extrajudicial leniency.
“I trusted that [my country] would never betray me. We, Russian citizens, were told that those convicted of particularly grave crimes would not be taken to Ukraine. I believed that until I saw it wasn’t true myself.”
“PTSD can drastically change a person’s perception of what’s right and what’s wrong,” says Dr Yelena Kharlamova, a professor at Riga Stradins University, “and that’s especially true of PTSD that’s the result of time spent in the military.”
“The country is going to need a huge number of mental health professionals to rehabilitate all these men”, says an NGO worker. “But the best way to avoid this kind of violence is to stop waging wars.”


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