Saturday, 28 January 2023

Wagner Group promised pardons for convicts who survived six months fighting in Ukraine — then buried them in Russian graveyard.

 Extract from ABC News

Posted 

Late last summer, a plot of land on the edge of a small farming community in southern Russia began to fill with scores of newly dug graves of fighters killed in Ukraine.

The resting places were adorned with simple wooden crosses and brightly coloured wreaths that bore the insignia of Russia's Wagner Group, a feared and secretive private army.

There were around 200 graves at the site on the outskirts of Bakinskaya village in Krasnodar region when Reuters visited in late January.

The news agency matched the names of at least 39 of the dead there and at three other nearby cemeteries to Russian court records, publicly available databases and social media accounts.

Reuters also spoke to family, friends and lawyers of some of the dead.

Many of the men buried at Bakinskaya were convicts who were recruited by Wagner last year after its founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, promised prisoners a pardon if they survived six months at the front, this reporting showed.

Red black and yellow wreaths sit on dirt graves under wooden crosses as far back as the horizon.
Scores of fresh graves outside a village in southern Russia bear the insignia of the Wagner Group, a private army. (Reuters: Stringer )

They included a contract killer, murderers, career criminals and people with alcohol problems.

For months, Wagner has been locked in a bloody battle of attrition to take the towns of Bakhmut and Soledar in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region.

Western and Ukrainian officials have said it is using convicts as cannon fodder to overwhelm Ukraine's defences.

Toughening sanctions on Wagner Group this month, White House national security spokesman John Kirby branded the group "a criminal organisation that is committing widespread atrocities and human rights abuses".

In a short, open reply to the US government, Mr Prigozhin asked Mr Kirby to "please clarify what crime was committed" by Wagner.

Cemetery surrounded by fences, security cameras

Videos and photographs of the graves first appeared on social media channels in the Krasnodar region in December.

Reuters geolocated these images to the Bakinskaya cemetery and reviewed satellite imagery of the site from Maxar Technologies and Capella Space.

Yevgeny Prigozhin points his finger, his gaze his slightly past the camera
Businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin admitted to founding the Wagner Group. (AP Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko)

Satellite pictures show that the Wagner plot was empty in the summer, had three rows of graves by the end of November and was three-quarters full by early January.

Virtually the entire plot was used by January 24.

Local activist Vitaly Votanovsky — who took the first pictures and has documented soldiers killed in Ukraine and buried in Krasnodar region graveyards — told Reuters he observed a truck delivering bodies to the cemetery.

He said gravediggers told him the bodies had come from the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, close to Russia's border with Donetsk region.

When Reuters visited the cemetery in January, fences and security cameras were being installed around the plot and another burial was underway.

Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti published footage in early January of Mr Prigozhin visiting the cemetery, crossing himself and laying flowers on one grave.

He told local media the men buried there had expressed a wish to be laid to rest at a Wagner chapel outside the nearby town of Goryachiy Klyuch, rather than having their bodies returned to relatives.

The Bakinskaya plot was provided by the local authorities, he said, after the chapel ran out of space.

Russian convicts identified in Bakinskaya cemetery

In 2019, Reuters reported on the existence of a Wagner training camp in the village of Molkino, around 9 kilometres from Bakinskaya.

Of the 39 convicts Reuters identified, 10 had been imprisoned for murder or manslaughter, 24 for robbery and two for grievous bodily harm.

Dirt graves with wooden crosses and red, yellow and black wreaths.
The graves rapidly increased over the space of a few weeks. (Reuters: Stringer)

Other crimes included manufacturing or dealing in drugs and blackmail.

Among the convicts were citizens of Ukraine, Moldova and the Russian-backed breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia.

Wooden markers on their graves at Bakinskaya and three nearby cemeteries show the men perished between July and December 2022, at the height of the battle for Bakhmut.

One of the youngest, buried at the nearby Martanskaya cemetery, is Vadim Pushnya.

He was just 25 years old when he died on November 19.

Pushnya was imprisoned in 2020 for burgling garages, a beer shop and a cement factory in his hometown of Goryachiy Klyuch, close to the Wagner chapel.

The birthdate on Pushnya's grave matches the date given on his social media accounts and in court records.

On the other hand, the oldest buried prisoner, Fail Nabiev, was serving one-and-a-half years for burglary in Ivanovo region's Penal Colony No. 2, 321km north-east of Moscow, at least his second such prison spell.

He had been convicted in May 2022 — by a court in the picturesque tourist town of Suzdal — of stealing a string trimmer and a sanding machine valued at a total of 5,500 roubles ($110) from a garage.

According to his simple wooden grave marker, emblazoned with an Islamic crescent moon, Nabiev died in October, less than five months after being sentenced. He was 60.

Nabiev's common-law wife, Olga Viktorova, confirmed to Reuters that her husband had been killed while serving with Wagner in the military campaign in Ukraine.

Ms Viktorova said her husband had been nearing the end of his prison term, and had substantial credit card debts that she was now left to pay.

She said she did not know that her husband had joined Wagner until after his death.

Russian independent news site iStories has reported that Mr Prigozhin visited Penal Colony No. 2 to recruit fighters in August.

A black red and gold chapel building is seen on the edge of a dirt hill.
Officials say the nearby chapel ran out of space for the bodies. (Reuters: Stringer )

Reuters could not independently verify the report.

"He always had crazy ideas. An incorrigible optimist," Ms Viktorova said.

She said Nabiev probably "thought that he'd take a quick trip to Ukraine and earn some money".

Wagner claims convict fighters given 'second chance' on front

The Kremlin, Russia's Defence Ministry and Russian prison authorities did not reply to questions for this article.

However, the Russian government has in the past praised the "courageous and selfless actions" of Wagner fighters.

Wagner's founder Mr Prigozhin, who also didn't comment, has said previously he was giving convicts "a second chance at life."

Although Reuters was unable to confirm where exactly the men died, the mother of one said that her son was killed in the Donetsk region.

The social media accounts of several others also indicate that they were in Ukraine prior to their deaths.

Since the beginning of Russia's war in Ukraine, the previously secretive Wagner founder Mr Prigozhin has since assumed an increasingly public profile.

In the past, Wagner fighters have deployed to Syria, Libya and the Central African Republic in support of Russia's allies.

Mr Prigozhin — known in Russia as "Putin's chef" because of his Kremlin catering contracts — had consistently denied any links to Wagner.

Then, last September, he confirmed he founded the private army, which he described as a "group of patriots".

Since then, Mr Prigozhin has repeatedly visited the frontlines in eastern Ukraine, while also criticising Russia's military leadership and some senior officials, and personally spearheading a drive to recruit fighters from Russia's sprawling penal system.

According to a regular report published by the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service, Russia's penal colony population decreased by about 8 per cent from 353,210 in August to 324,906 in early November, the largest drop in more than a decade.

The report gave no reasons for the sudden, sharp decline, which coincided with the beginning of Wagner's prison recruitment push.

The Federal Penitentiary Service did not reply to detailed questions for this article.

Last month, Reuters reported that the US intelligence community believed Wagner had approximately 40,000 prisoner recruits deployed in Ukraine, as of December, accounting for the vast majority of Wagner personnel in the country.

Wagner has not commented on the figure nor provided any information on fighter numbers.

In a January 14 video message, Mr Prigozhin described Wagner as a fully independent force with its own aircraft, tanks, rockets and artillery.

It was "probably the most experienced army that exists in the world today", he said.

Russia's criminal underclass drawn into fighting in search of pardons

Some of the convicts identified by Reuters were violent offenders who had spent much of their adult life in prison or were facing long sentences.

Court papers reviewed by Reuters also portray men who had struggled with alcohol problems. The names of some others are on banking blacklists, suggesting personal financial troubles.

Two men - one sporting a black eye - sit at an conference desk, seen through a large W embossed on glass
Wagner opened its own military centre in St Petersburg late last year. (Reuters: Igor Russak)

Their lives bring into bleak focus the realities of Russia's criminal underclass.

Mr Prigozhin, in December, told Russian news site RBC he was giving convicts an opportunity "to redeem themselves".

In January, he appeared alongside the first group of fighters to be pardoned, having survived their stints in Ukraine.

A few weeks later, he wrote an open letter to the speaker of Russia's parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, asking him to criminalise any actions or publications that discredit Wagner fighters and to outlaw public disclosure of their criminal pasts.

He wrote that those "who are risking their lives every day and dying for the Motherland are being portrayed as second-class people, stripping them of the right to atone for their guilt".

A poster with the title WANTED BY THE FBI features three photos of a bald man wearing a suit and blue tie
Yevgeny Prigozhin is wanted by the FBI for conspiracy to defraud the United States.(Reuters: FBI)

Mr Volodin did not reply to Reuters' request for comment.

Among the prisoners identified by Reuters was 43-year-old Anatoly Bodenkov.

He was serving a 16-year sentence after his conviction as a contract killer, court papers show.

According to a local news report on the case, in 2016 Bodenkov murdered a local real estate agent in the northern city of Kirovo-Chepetsk with a sawn-off shotgun, for 400,000 roubles ($8,072.20).

His grave marker said Bodenkov died on November 27, 2022. It doesn't say where.

A second prisoner, Viktor Deshko, 40, was sentenced to 10 years for a murder in 2021, according to court documents and local media reports.

He cut a woman's throat during a drunken argument over money in the forests near the mining town of Shakhty, close to the border with the Russian-controlled Donbas.

Court documents described Deshko as "an aggressive person, given to abusing alcohol".

He was on probation at the time of the killing, having previously served three and a half years for assault with a deadly weapon.

For Bodenkov and Deshko, the full names and dates of birth on the grave markers matched their social media and court records.

Reuters was not able to contact friends or family of the two men, and their lawyers did not reply to requests for comment.

A third man, Vyacheslav Kochas, was sentenced to 18 years in prison by a St Petersburg court, for murder and armed robbery in 2020, when he was 23.

According to Russian court documents, Kochas and another man burst into the apartment of an acquaintance while drunk, in an attempted robbery.

He was found to have beaten the acquaintance and a female victim unconscious, using an iron and a metal clothes horse.

Kochas then set fire to an item of clothing and threw it at the unconscious man. Much of the apartment was gutted by the fire, and the man succumbed to his wounds two days later.

A group of young men in military uniform stand in front of an ornate, sculpted church wall.
Russia has vowed to increase its military spending over the coming year. (Reuters: Yulia Morozova)

Photographs of Kochas on social media show a baby-faced man. In some, he is embracing an unidentified young woman.

Kochas's profile on VKontakte, Russia's Facebook equivalent, now reads: "Killed in the Donbas".

His grave marker at Bakinskaya gives his date of death as July 21, shortly after his 25th birthday and in the earliest days of Russia's push towards Bakhmut.

Kochas's lawyer, Stepan Akimov, described his former client as "a really ordinary guy" whom, he said, had been unfairly convicted.

The last he heard from Kochas was a text message after his appeal failed, thanking Mr Akimov for his help.

Mr Akimov learned from Reuters that his former client had joined Wagner.

"I can imagine, given the length of his sentence, and how young he was, it seemed to him a way to go free," Mr Akimov said.

"When a prisoner has a double-digit sentence, here they're offering release in six months. Apparently, Vyacheslav thought this offer was a way out."

Reuters was unable to reach Kochas' surviving relatives.

'Think of themselves as becoming winners'

Russia has one of the world's largest prison populations per capita.

Mark Galeotti — author of The Vory: Russia's super mafia, a book on Russia's criminal and prison cultures — said the potential appeal of Wagner to inmates was wider than just a bid for clemency.

Service with Wagner, he said, offered pride and a sense of purpose to convicts with few prospects after release, people who have spent time in a prison culture suffused with "a very strong Russian nationalist tinge".

"Yes, this will give you the chance to get out of prison, but also it gives you the chance to actually be someone," Mr Galeotti said.

"This is a way in which, actually, Wagner can appeal to people who definitely are, or believe themselves to be, marginalised, outsiders, losers in some way in the system, and gives them the chance to think of themselves as becoming winners."

A mural showing soldiers holding machine guns behind the Russian flag and a W is painted on a graffiti wall.
The private military group has grown in infamy since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. (Reuters: Marko Djurica)

At least one of the men buried at Bakinskaya concealed their criminal record and prison time from loved ones.

For more than half a decade after she married and left her hometown of Luhansk in eastern Ukraine, Svitlana Holyk believed that her brother, Yury Danilyuk, was working somewhere in the far north of Russia.

The two Ukrainian-born siblings had few living relatives and rarely spoke after Russian-backed proxies seized their home city in 2014, she said.

She knew only that her brother travelled regularly for work to the Russian border city of Bryansk, 800km away.

However, while she was building a new life in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro, Yury was using social media to subscribe to pro-Russian groups supporting the Donbas separatist insurgency, his online activity shows.

In 2016, having been out of touch for a year and a half, he told his sister he had moved to Russia's Arctic north. She said his messages were short, and he said little about his life.

"I suspected then that something had happened, that he might have some troubles, that he did not want to, or could not, talk about for some reason," she told Reuters, speaking Ukrainian, in a telephone call from Dnipro.

The city has now become a major logistics hub for the Ukrainian army fighting in the Donbas, and a constant target of Russian missiles.

A close friend of Yury Danilyuk spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity.

The friend said that Yury had lied to his sister, whom he deeply loved, to avoid upsetting her with news of his imprisonment.

In reality, he had been sentenced in 2016 to nine years and eight months in prison on drugs charges.

The two men were incarcerated together in Krasnodar region's Penal Colony No. 6.

YouTube A defector who fought for the Wagner group says he witnessed prisoners of war being executed.

The friend said he last spoke to Yury in September 2022 and heard later that month from other inmates that he had joined Wagner.

Olga Romanova — a prisoners-rights activist with the Russia Behind Bars watchdog group — told Reuters that Mr Prigozhin had visited Penal Colony No. 6 to recruit inmates on two separate occasions.

Reuters could not independently verify these visits.

The friend said that, during his time in jail, Yury fell in with a faction of prisoners who refused to cooperate with prison authorities on principle, a common phenomenon in Russia's penitentiary system.

That meant he forfeited the chance of early release for good behaviour.

The friend said that Yury's decision to join Wagner was motivated by the knowledge that he would likely otherwise serve his long sentence in full.

According to his grave, Yury Danilyuk died on November 30, 2022. He was 28.

His sister said she had known nothing of her brother's prison sentence, service with Wagner, and eventual death during Russia's war against the country of their birth until contacted by Reuters journalists.

"The fact that Yury died I learned from you," she said. "I re-read your message several times when you wrote to me. Somehow I couldn't believe it."

The inmate friend recalled Yury as a fierce patriot of his native Donbas, with a passion for cars.

"I blame it all on him not wanting to cooperate with the prison authorities," the friend said.

"If he had agreed, he'd be alive. But he refused, so he's a fool."

Reuters

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