ChrisO_wiki Profile picture
Jun 2, 2023 11 tweets 2 min read Read on X
1/ Citizens of the puppet 'Donetsk People's Republic' (DNR) are complaining en masse that they are not being paid their promised compensation for deaths and injuries caused to local residents by the war. The DNR itself admits that it owes more than 38 billion rubles ($467m). ⬇️ Image
2/ Relatives and soldiers of the DNR's armed forces – which have been decimated due to being used as so-called 'meat waves' against Ukrainian positions – have been posting numerous videos complaining about the lack of compensation payments and appealing to Putin for help.
3/ In one video, a wife says: "Starting from September 2022, funding for lump-sum compensation for wounded and killed DNR servicemen for 2022 was terminated. We submitted documents to the commission of the Ministry of Labour and Social Policy of the DNR.
4/ "There are a lot of us. We applied to all authorities. From the presidential administration to the Prosecutor General's Office of the Russian Federation.
5/ "All our appeals are forwarded to the government of the DNR, which redirects them to the Ministry of Labour, and the answers come from there that there is no funding. We write to the deputies and there are no results."
6/ According to the wife of one wounded soldier, his unit "collected all the necessary documents promptly, the medical examiner issued a conclusion of a severe injury.
7/ "In November we submitted all the documents for payment, and for seven months there have been no payments, the allowance during treatment is 30,000 rubles ($371). The answer is the same, there is no funding."
8/ People seeking compensation have complained to the DNR state prosecutor's office, which admitted that an audit had "established the fact of lack of funding for this type of payment, which requires an amount of more than 38 billion rubles."
9/ It's very unlikely that the DNR will be able to pay the sums it owes, as its finances are precarious, its economy is a mess and it's kept afloat only by Russian government funding.
10/ The Russian government has shown little concern previously for the welfare of DNR soldiers and their families, so there seems to be little likelihood that the relatives' video appeals will achieve much. /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

May 14
1/ Why can't Russia have n̶i̶c̶e̶ ̶t̶h̶i̶n̶g̶s̶ interceptor drones that work, unlike Ukraine? The answer, says one warblogger, is that Russia's military-industrial complex has been captured by big vested interests who've made it into a "gravy train". ⬇️
2/ '¡No Pasaràn!' compares Ukraine's P1-SUN with Russia's Yolka interceptor drone:

"The Ukrainians also made a "Yolka." How is it different from ours?

P1-SUN.
Acceleration up to 450 km/h.
Interception altitude up to 5000 m. Image
3/ "Our Yolka:
Maximum speed 250.
Interception altitude 2000 m.

Not allowed in the rain, not allowed at night, not allowed if facing the sun. If a bird flies between the Yolka and an enemy UAV, the Yolka can lock onto it. It can simply get knocked off course. Image
Read 6 tweets
May 14
1/ The Russian government's claims that it isn't blocking GitHub are widely disbelieved by Russian commentators, who continue to protest about the severe impact that the apparent restrictions on accessing it will have on military-industrial software development. ⬇️ Image
2/ The military-technical Telegram channel 'Atomic Cherry' is one of many to note that Russian software developers – like developers everywhere – are functionally dependent on the open-source code libraries provided by GitHub:
3/ "Russia's restrictive policies continue to strike at various locations, smashing and destroying not just the "free internet," but the information space itself, and they've finally reached the resource I've been anticipating for so long—GitHub.
Read 14 tweets
May 13
1/ The Russian Navy now appears to be covering entire submarines in anti-drone nets. A satellite photograph published by a Russian warblogger shows two net-covered Pacific Fleet submarines anchored alongside quays. ⬇️ Image
2/ According to the Russian warblogger 'Ramsay', the photo "shows the Pacific Fleet's submarine command attempting to prevent a repeat of Operation Spiderweb." The location in question is the Rybachiy Naval Base in Kamchatka, over 7,300 km from Ukraine. Image
3/ Ramsay writes: "The checklist for preparing the nuclear-powered missile submarine for sea now includes the item "Clearing the superstructure of anti-drone protection."
Read 6 tweets
May 13
1/ Russian programmers are reporting that GitHub, the world's largest cloud platform for IT projects and collaborative development, is becoming increasingly inaccessible for them. The reasons aren't clear, but it's a looming disaster for Russian military and civilian IT. ⬇️ Image
2/ The Internet censorship monitoring service OONI has recorded a growing trend, beginning on 5th May, of failed connections to Github from Russian users, reaching 16% of all Russian connection attempts. Image
3/ While Github isn't officially listed on the Russian media regulator Roskomnadzor's registry of banned websites, over 130 projects on the site have been blocked by Russian court orders, Roskomnadzor, the consumer regulator Rospotrebnadzor, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Read 24 tweets
May 13
1/ The Russian army is infected from top to bottom with false reports and fake military successes, costing many lives, according to a Russian warblogger fighting in Ukraine. He says that little effort is being made to root out the tide of lies. ⬇️ Image
2/ The Russian army's tendency to produce and disseminate false information up the ranks all the way to Vladimir Putin has been noted often before. It has often backfired publicly on the army, most recently with its false claims to have captured Kupyansk.
3/ 'Donetsk infantry' writes on Telegram, using the common euphemism of "Laotians" for Russians, to evade the censors:
Read 24 tweets
May 12
1/ The Russian government's Internet shutdown from 5th to 9th May appears to have been predictably badly implemented. It seems to have spilled out from Moscow across Russia and also affected SMS and phone calls, causing widespread disruption and public anger. ⬇️ Image
2/ The restrictions were officially explained as security measures leading up to and during the Victory Day parades in Moscow and St Petersburg. Russian firms issued advisories to download maps, stock up on cash, and use Wi-Fi. In practice, far more got broken than anticipated.
3/ Russians interviewed by the independent Russian outlet 'We can explain' reported that the outages affected other cities, as well as knocking out Wi-Fi and mobile phone services. They expressed anger, deep dissatisfaction, and frustration at the situation:
Read 11 tweets

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