1/ With the dismissal of Colonel-General Aleksandr Lapin as the commander of Russia's Central Military District, ugly stories are emerging about his treatment of mobilised soldiers. He's said to have put his pistol to the head of a lieutenant and threatened to shoot him. ⬇️
2/ Mediazona reports that on 13 October, Lapin violently confronted Lieutenant Dmitry Vodnev, who withdrew his company from shelling at the village of Kolomyichykha, near Svatove in Luhansk oblast. The back story has emerged from the account of another soldier published by SOTA.
3/ Like many other mobiks, Vodnev's men were not given a medical examination or combat training after being mobilised into the 423rd Yampolsky motorized rifle regiment around 22 September. They were given only 1 day's shooting practice at a military camp in Belgorod.
4/ Only a few days later the men were sent to Ukraine to defend a heavily contested section of the front line near Kolomyychikha. The most recent reports as of 26 October indicate that the area is still the scene of heavy fighting and intense shelling.
5/ The Russians had grossly inadequate equipment – another man in the same unit, Nikita Pavlov, reported being given only a damaged, rusty AK-74M that could not be fired. They took shelter in a tractor hangar near Kolomyychikha, arriving on 7 October.
6/ The men filmed their conditions on 11 October. A video shows them living in abject squalor without heat, light, food or water. They complain that they are all sick with respiratory complaints. Pavlov says they foraged from apple trees in the village.
7/ Pavlov describes what subsequently happened: "In the afternoon, massive mortar fire started on us. Our 2nd platoon and 1st platoon lay down in the forest belt, 5th and 6th companies also lay down in the forest belt.
8/ As a result of two hours of shelling there were more than 4 killed and 3 wounded. Also after the shelling, the 5th and 6th companies fled to a school basement. A communications company and a KAMAZ [truck] loaded with ammunition and mines arrived.
9/ We ordered the communications company to lie down in the wooded area. The driver of the second KAMAZ, realising what was going on, quickly drove back.
10/ In the evening of that day fire began to fall on us. The commanders of the communications company ordered us to sit behind a hangar, and as a result of the two-hour bombardment, the second hangar was destroyed and an uncrewed BMP was destroyed.
11/ The next morning we came under heavy fire, which lasted more than four hours. The communications company scattered in panic during the shelling. As a result, more than 6 men were killed and more than 3 were wounded."
12/ Pavlov's account is corroborated by a similar account from a soldier in another unit under the 15th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment, which held the second line behind the men of the 423rd Regiment. He was able to observe their fate under the Ukrainian bombardment.
13/ "For seven hours they were there – from 12:00 to 19:00 – and bombed with mortars. The major ordered them, as they told me, to hold some hangar. They left there, another company came, and again the major said to occupy that hangar where the [Ukrainian] mortar was shelling.
14/ Brilliant stupidity of the commander! Then at 19:00 they started to retreat. We asked them, "Like, who are you, what are you, where are you coming from?"
15/ [They replied], "The village is surrendered, there's hardly anyone there, those who survived are hiding in the basement in the school, tanks are coming now". Then there was an artillery bombardment and we followed them."
6/ The men were advised to leave by a professional soldier, a sergeant, who told them, "If you want to live, then go up the road. There are KAMAZ trucks and tanks there." They found only one tank, as all the officers had already left on the trucks, and walked to Svatove instead.
17/ Several hours later, late at night, they reached a gas station at the entrance to Svatove – probably the АЗС station on the P07 road just west of the town. They were stopped by soldiers and prevented from going any further. The men were made to sleep on pavements in the open.
18/ Pavlov says that "Since there were no officers and commanders, we set ourselves the task of finding the headquarters and asking about further actions." The commander of the 5th company, Lieutenant Dmitry Vodnev, went to look for officers, but found only military policemen.
19/ The men were not allowed to enter Svatove. After Vodnev told the MPs about the retreat from Kolomyychikha, they informed Colonel General Lapin. He went to the gas station to berate the surviving men – who numbered around 50 – to try to force them to return to the front line.
20/ Pavlov writes: "Colonel General Lapin put a gun to the head of Lieutenant [Vodnev], demanding we go back, and he also threw a lot of insults at us (traitors, deserters and a lot of swear words)." Vodnev was taken away by Lapin's bodyguards for 'correction'.
21/ According to Vodnev's father, the bodyguards "tied [Vodnev's] hands behind his back, took him somewhere and threw him face down on the ground – but did not beat him."
22/ His father says: "They began to threaten him, accuse him, they said that he should come back, and insulted him, [Lapin] said: "Damn you and your family." His assistants filmed with a phone, they said: “We will broadcast it all, show everyone in schools what you are ...”
23/ After that, Pavlov says, "they brought [Vodnev] in again to convince us to go back to the front, but he said: "Guys, I can't do that." Again we were lined up [parade-style] at the gas station in front of the checkpoint in Svatove."
24/ "And there they began telling us: 'You are deserters, you are traitors to the Motherland." Though they started with saying that we did everything right - we retreated, we saved our lives.
25/ When they realised that we were not going to return to this place and just sit and wait for them to come, they started insulting us."
26/ A political officer named Colonel Rumyantsev also turned up to try to 'motivate' the men. "We asked: "At least give us something to eat and drink"," Pavlov writes. "To which Colonel Rumyantsev told us that people like us do not deserve to eat, drink or sleep."
27/ The 'remotivation' session ended abruptly when Lapin's bodyguards spotted a hovering drone. The officers left hastily, leaving the mobilised men under the control of two military police officers who were ordered to execute any man who stepped left or right out of the line.
28/ They did not see Vodnev again; he was taken away back across the Russian border to be imprisoned at the commandant's office in Valuyki. He is reportedly facing possible charges of 'sabotaging military training'.
29/ The next morning, after another night which the men spent sleeping in the open air, "Colonel Rumyantsev arrived again in a state of alcoholic intoxication and started speaking in an abusive manner and verbally humiliating us, thus putting pressure on our psyche.
30/ Then in the afternoon he brought food and water. An hour later, Wagner PMC fighters came to us, and also started insulting us (calling us traitors, cowards, deserters)."
31/ The Wagnerites persuaded two of the 423rd Regiment men to sign up with them instead. The remainder were loaded onto two KAMAZs and driven to the Russian border near Belgorod, then taken to an army camp at Alekseevka. They were finally able to contact their relatives.
32/ The men are currently reported to be awaiting a decision on their future. Some have medical conditions that meant they should not have been mobilised at all. Their families are submitting appeals on their behalf, while the men are hoping not to get sent back to Ukraine. /end
1/ Russian army commanders are reportedly refusing to allow stored ZSU-23-4 Shilkas mobile anti-aircraft guns to be refurbished and put back into service, despite Russia's desperate need for more defences against Ukraine's increasingly large-scale drone strikes. ⬇️
2/ 'The Voivode Broadcasts', a Telegram channel written by three Russian Aerospace Force pilots, writes:
"I was talking to some guys from one of the repair battalions the other day."
3/ "They were showing us what Category 5 [the lowest condition] equipment they're getting off its knees with their own resources.
BMPs [armoured personnel carriers], BTS [armoured recovery tractors], and so on.
1/ Russia has "shot itself in the dick" with its block on Telegram, according to a scathing commentary. A Russian warblogger notes that pro-Kremlin propagandists have seen huge falls in views of their Telegram channels, but not dissident and pro-Ukraine channels. ⬇️
2/ Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist Dmitry Steshin calls it "a day of celebration for foreign agents, as the audience for pro-Russian channels on Telegram has plummeted."
3/ "Margarita Simonyan saw a 52.3% drop, while propagandist Alexander Sladkov saw a 49.4% drop. Views for ‘RT in Russian’ fell by 42%, whilst those for propagandists Vladimir Solovyov and Pavel Zarubin fell by 47.2% and 42.7% respectively.
1/ In a further sign of an economic slump in Russia, the giant vehicle manufacturer AvtoVAZ will shut down production entirely for 17 days due to falling demand and overcrowded warehouses. Its vehicles aren't selling and storage facilities are overflowing. ⬇️
2/ The Russian news outlet Mash reports that AvtoVAZ will shut down its assembly lines for almost the entire period from 27 April to 17 May, with the workforce sent on mandatory leave.
3/ Workers will be sent to do maintenance work between 27-30 April, 12-13 May will be covered by a postponement of vacation days from December, and staff will be paid at two-thirds their normal salary on 14-15 May.
1/ Brutally murdering women in front of their children has effectively been legalised in Russia, due to the Russian government's policy of allowing pre-trial detainees to go to Ukraine to fight rather than facing justice. A horrific case from Voronezh highlights the problem. ⬇️
2/ Madina Nikolaevna Mironenko, a 42-year-old soldier's widow and mother of four children, was dragged out of her house by her hair and stabbed to death by a masked neighbour, in front of her nine-year-old daughter. Another neighbour witnessed the attack and recognised the man.
3/ A group of soldiers' relatives in Voronezh has written an open letter to the authorities:
"There are 220 of us (each of us can write to you personally if necessary), we are relatives of those who, at the call and behest of their hearts,…
1/ The late governor of Russia's Kursk region, Roman Starovoit, is said to have received huge cash bribes in grocery bags of food and alcohol, and stole 100 million rubles ($1.2 million) from the budget assigned to build fortifications along the border with Ukraine. ⬇️
2/ Starovoit, who shot himself on 7 July 2025 shortly before he was due to be charged for fraud, has been the subject of testimony given by Alexey Smirnov, his also-indicted deputy and successor. Smirnov says that he and his own deputy also took bribes.
3/ The fortifications were swept aside with ease by Ukrainian forces when they invaded the Kursk region in August 2024. Subsequent Russian investigations found that much of the money allocated to the defences had been stolen.
1/ Austria has become the latest European country to ban US military overflights related to the Iran war. The country's Defence Ministry has announced that it has refused "several" requests from the US government, citing Austria's Neutrality Law.
2/ A statement issued by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Defence says that it will not let the US use its airspace for military operations against Iran. Individual requests for overflights are being reviewed in consultation with the Austrian Foreign Ministry.
3/ According to Colonel Michael Bauer, "There have indeed been requests and they were refused from the outset". He adds that every time a similar request "involves a country at war, it is refused."