cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/54631718

Replacing the dead and wounded has become key to maintaining Russia’s full-scale war in Ukraine, and authorities have presented the scheme that Averin [a former student turned soldier whose death has been verified by the BBC] was recruited through as a voluntary route into a modern, high-tech and relatively safe branch of the military.

Students are offered a special one-year contract to serve in a new branch of the military known as “unmanned systems troops” - as drones have become central to the war in Ukraine.

[Averin’s] mother believes he was not used as the protected technical specialist he had expected to become: “He said nothing would happen to him.”

  • idiomaddict
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    2 days ago

    Averin grew up in an orphanage in eastern Siberia until he was taken into foster care aged 11. By the time he was recruited into the army he was in his final year at the Buryat Republican Technical School of Construction.

    Early in April, he called his foster mother to say he was being sent somewhere “with no [phone] signal”, and that she should not worry.

    Initially he said he had gone away to earn money at Wildberries, a Russian online retailer, and she was shocked to find out he had signed a military contract and had completed training as a drone operator.

    “He told me: ‘Nothing will happen to me, everything will be fine.’”

    A week later, on 8 April, she learned he had been killed in a mortar strike near Russian-occupied Luhansk in eastern Ukraine.

    I go back and forth with sympathy for the soldiers themselves (it gets harder to feel nothing for a dumb, scared 18 year old who signed up for something they didn’t understand, the further from 18 I get), but what a horrible thing for that foster mother. She must have wanted to have a child to take care of for so long, and she thought he was safe as a student and about to become qualified for a good job that supports his community, but he’s just suddenly gone.

    • Sepia@mander.xyzOP
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      4 days ago

      Thanks,but it’s strange. Here all is freely accessible. I was not aware that the BBC has paywall.

      • zabadoh@ani.social
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        4 days ago

        Here in the US, some articles are free, but others are paywalled.

        It’s unpredictable.

        But I understand the need to raise money, given the BBC’s budget woes (free article) from the decline in UK TV license fees from less people watching traditional TV these days.

        I’m sure in the UK it’s free, possibly elsewhere.

        • Sepia@mander.xyzOP
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          4 days ago

          Thanks for this. I didn’t know this, but so I’ll archive the BBC when posting from now on.