From summons to grave. Russia’s mobilized soldiers die in less than five months in the war in Ukraine. But on the front line they live only a few days.
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More than half of them were 30-45 years old, Important Stories reported.
In almost every region of Russia, at least one man who was called for a summons has already been buried.
The oldest dead mobilized on the list is 62-year-old Major Nikolai Isakov from the Tver region. He spent about eight months in the war and died in early June on Russian territory in the Shebekinsky district of the Belgorod region.
On average, those mobilized died after 4.5 months in the combat zone.
In the video published by the commander of the Ground Forces, Syrsky, there is a Russian prisoner, private Evgeniy Plakhotko, born in 1999, from the Altai Territory. I received a summons for mobilization at a wedding, they said if I don’t take it, I’ll go to jail.
They said that they would study for 6 months, then they would send everyone home. He didn’t expect to fight. He says that the military leadership constantly deceived them. They were hinted that they were cannon fodder.
I wanted to “move into a mental hospital,” but it didn’t work out; I thought about suicide. Then he was captured.
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.