Relatives of the dead sailors refused to accept both at the command of the Russian Navy and at the command of the Black Sea Fleet.
In Russia, officials and intelligence agencies continue to force families to hide information about their relatives who died on the Moscow cruiser. This was reported by the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine (GUR) on Sunday, June 19.
“27 crew members, including 19 conscripts, were presumed missing. Only midshipman Vakhrushev was officially buried in Sevastopol,” the report said.
“The cruiser commander, Captain First Rank Kuprin, who, in violation of the charter, was one of the first to leave the ship, describes his action as an attempt to rescue the conscripts. As if he had received such an order after the conscripts explosion on the ship, “added the GUR.
Relatives of the deceased sailors are said to have refused to accept both the command of the Russian Navy and the command of the Black Sea Fleet, and the authorities and social security. They were sent to a group of psychologists, doctors and lawyers, specially created to hide information about the dead and missing occupiers-conscripts.
“Learned about the desire of relatives to publish information about the dead in the media, FSB officials go to their homes and workplaces and conduct explanatory work with threats of criminal liability for disclosing state secrets, ”the message said.
According to GUR, social tension continues to grow among the relatives of the Russians who died on the Moscow cruiser.
Recall that on April 13, the cruiser Moskva was hit by Ukrainian missiles Neptune and bullets exploded on it. The ship sank the next day.
In the Russian Federation, Moscow sailors were identified as participants in the war, but the cruiser itself was not
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Source: korrespondent

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.