U.N. expert says Russian prisoners sent to fight in Ukraine committing crimes when they return - Los Angeles Times
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U.N. expert says Russian prisoners sent to fight in Ukraine committing crimes when they return

Russian President Vladimir Putin sits in front of a microphone at a desk
Russian President Vladimir Putin takes part in the beginning of the active phase of the Ocean-2024 naval drills in the Kremlin in Moscow on Sept. 10.
(Alexander Kazakov / Associated Press)
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A U.N.-backed human rights expert monitoring President Vladimir Putin’s Russia decried increased violence in the country caused by former prisoners who have their sentences shortened or pardoned to fight in Ukraine and then return home to commit crimes including rape and murder.

Mariana Katzarova, who is observing rights in Russia under a mandate from the U.N.-backed Human Rights Council, said the return home to Russia of former criminals who have had their legal slates wiped clean is adding to more domestic violence.

The phenomenon first emerged last year among returning fighters, but Katzarova noted that pardons and shortened sentences in Russia for prisoners who agree to fight in Ukraine became law in Russia in March.

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In a recent interview with reporters, Katzarova said an estimated 170,000 convicted violent criminals have been recruited to fight in Ukraine.

Some convicts recruited by Russia’s private military contractor Wagner to fight in the war in Ukraine are coming home and committing new crimes.

July 3, 2023

“Many of them who return — and this is an emerging trend — have been perpetrating new violent crimes to begin with against women, against girls, against children, including sexual violence and killings,” she said in Geneva, where the council is holding its autumn session.

“This has increased the violence against women in Russia, which already is on a very high level with thousands of women dying each year as a result of domestic violence,” she said. “There is no law in Russia distinctly criminalizing domestic violence or gender-based violence.”

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Russia’s war in Ukraine is in its third year, and the Kremlin has gone to great lengths to replenish its troops there. In 2022, the authorities mobilized some 300,000 men in a partial call-up, and human rights groups and media also reported an effort to recruit inmates serving time in prisons across the vast country. Initially, the recruitment was carried out by the Wagner mercenary group, but then Russia’s Defense Ministry took over, according to activists and media reports.

In March, the Russian parliament passed a law allowing the authorities to release convicted criminals from prisons if they enlist into the army and sign a contract with the Defense Ministry.

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