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Aug 7 24 tweets 5 min read Read on X
1/ The Russian army is experiencing an epidemic of hepatitis and other infectious diseases, including HIV and tuberculosis, threatening a public health disaster. It has resulted from the Russian military ignoring its own recruitment rules and poor medical hygiene in the field. ⬇️ Image
2/ The Russian warblogger Anastasia Kasheverova writes that the army faces "the threat of a hepatitis epidemic - from the front to the rear."
3/ "The front, of course, is a breeding ground for diseases, viruses. Where there is death, disease and its carriers – rats, mice, lice – are constantly wandering around.
4/❗️The origin of the problem. The problem is that when they miscalculated at the beginning of the Special Military Operation and the army suffered losses, and then the mobilization was still partial, they began to take soldiers from prisons and with hepatitis and HIV, and now…
5/ …they are recruiting only such people. Wagner even had a separate project called Umbrella for those with HIV, hepatitis and other socially dangerous diseases, but they fought separately from everyone else.
6/ "Also, various gypsies and local unreliable contingents got soldiers hooked on drugs. I will write about drug trafficking in the new territories [i.e. occupied Ukraine] in detail separately. Drugs = infection with HIV, hepatitis.
7/ "In captivity, our soldiers are specially placed with tuberculosis patients, HIV-infected people, so that they get infected and take all this to the Russian Federation. [note - there is no evidence for this]
8/❗️Problem. No prevention, no treatment.

Being in the same trench, on the same operating table, hepatitis and HIV are transmitted from the sick to the healthy. This can happen during a blood transfusion, or it can happen in army life.
9/ "Right now, there is an epidemic of hepatitis C in the army. Hepatitis does not manifest itself immediately. Not only fellow soldiers are at risk, but also loved ones and relatives when a soldier is on leave at home.
10/ "They don't discharge you with hepatitis; you continue to fight. You take tests, then repeat them six months later. At the same time, there is no treatment for hepatitis in the army. No one is registered.
11/ "For example, in Moscow there is a special center where only Muscovites can get expensive medications for hepatitis. But military personnel, even Muscovites, cannot get the medicine, since they must be treated by the Ministry of Defence.
12/ ✅ Solution. Currently, when a soldier is diagnosed with hepatitis, they are ‘registered for dispensary observation’ (on paper, and in some cases not even that) for six months, then tested again after six months and then sent to the Military Medical Commission…
13/ …(again, not always). No one is being treated.

In the army, they do not give therapy even for HIV.
14/ "It is necessary that:

1. The Ministry of Defence treat hepatitis and HIV, as this is not just a threat to one person, but a threat to everyone who serves with the soldier and to his family members.
15/ "2. As far as I know, the Main Military Medical University has purchased drugs for the appropriate treatment. Another issue is that there may be problems with their distribution and uninterrupted supply to each individual soldier.
16/ "3. Keep accurate records of soldiers with HIV and hepatitis.

4. Inform fellow soldiers about the disease.
17/ "5. Conduct mandatory medical examinations among personnel and an expanded examination after captivity. (This, of course, may seem ridiculous, especially when we send untreated people to the front line and you can't get a military-medical commission).
18/ "Civilians really need to think about the threat of an epidemic of socially dangerous diseases. Hepatitis, HIV, tuberculosis – these are now in the army and are spreading to the frontline regions, and will continue to spread further into Russia."
19/ Soldiers have previously complained about the lack of treatment for HIV and hepatitis in the army, with relatives describing it as a slow death sentence for them. Very often, they were infected in prison colonies, where infectious diseases are rife.
20/ The army has for some time been ignoring its own rules about recruitment and discharge. Although its rules say that soldiers with infectious diseases are barred from joining and must be discharged if diagnosed, in practice this doesn't happen.
21/ People with infectious diseases have often been treated badly by military commanders and have been used as 'disposable' infantry. Ironically, this may have increased the chances of infections being transmitted between men as they get wounded.
22/ The Wagner 'Umbrella' unit for infected men which Kashevarova mentions kept its members separate, behind barbed wire, and used them as mobile targets to identify Ukrainian firing positions.
23/ Russia already has one of the highest HIV rates outside Africa, with over 1.5 million cases as of 2021 – ten times the EU average. It's virtually certain that when the war ends and soldiers are demobilised, there will be a drastic increase. /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Aug 6
1/ The Russian army is still largely a paper-based institution, relying on vast quantities of paperwork for its administration. One particularly time-consuming task is producing hand-written combat logs, which then has to be typed out, before being written out by hand again. ⬇️ Image
2/ A single officer in each battalion is responsible for all the paperwork (see the earlier thread below). The 'Vault No. 8' Telegram channel highlights how combat logs are managed.
3/ "Contemporary military historians will be interested to know that in the Rwandan Defence Army [sic] in 2022-2025, combat logs are still kept in handwritten form...

...and duplicated in print. Yeah...
Read 8 tweets
Aug 6
1/ At least 14 seriously injured soldiers who were preparing to be invalided out of the Russian army have abruptly been declared fit, despite being on crutches and in plaster casts, and have been sent to an assault squad, according to their relatives. ⬇️
2/ The men are from Russia's Chelyabinsk region and have sustained a variety of injuries which should make them unfit for service. Relatives of several of them have spoken to the ASTRA news service about their situation.
3/ One of them, a man named Aleksandr Krug, has a paralysed right hand for which he was initially treated in a hospital in Chelyabinsk before being sent back to Ukraine to a reserve battalion. He has already received a state award and a veteran's certificate.
Read 13 tweets
Aug 5
1/ Russian murderers, rapists and pedophiles are effectively being offered the chance to commit a crime and escape punishment if they sign a military contract before they go to court. The Russian police are also receiving bonuses for sending detainees to join the army. ⬇️ Image
2/ 'Mobilisation News' reports that leaflets are being distributed at bus stops in Russia's Novosibirsk region. They emphasise that one can avoid responsibility for crimes and earn a bonus payment of 2 million rubles ($25,000) by joining the army.
3/ The leaflet reads:

"After signing a contract for military service in the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation by a person suspected or accused of committing a crime, criminal prosecution is suspended on the basis of a request from the command of the military unit."
Read 22 tweets
Aug 5
1/ Russian warbloggers are angrily denouncing as a "black widow" a woman who appears to be boasting in a video of how profitable it is to marry a soldier in anticipation of his death. ⬇️
2/ A 27-year-old woman from Tyumen called Anastasia A. says in the video:

"He goes to the Special Military Operation, I register the children in his name, we are such a "happy couple", I receive a one-time payment of 5 million, I receive a monthly payment of 200-300,000."
3/ "Plus consider what a fucking windfall it is: kindergarten, fuck – benefits, school – benefits. Monthly payment as the wife of a serviceman. Fuck, we will live well, fuck, we will go to the sea. Why do you think my children are traveling around Abkhazia...
Read 6 tweets
Aug 5
1/ Donetsk and Luhansk's catastrophic water shortage is being caused by the Russian invasion's destruction of a 70-year-old canal. Russian sources say it can't be restored until the end of the decade at the earliest, even if Russia captures the source in Ukrainian territory. ⬇️ Image
2/ The occupied east of Ukraine is a naturally arid region, with no large rivers. This proved a challenge to the industrialists who built the region's coal and iron mines in the 19th century. Industrial activity severely depleted the region's groundwater.
3/ To allow for a big expansion in the region's industry, the Soviet Union embarked on a project in 1955-58 to build a canal 133.4 km (89.9 miles) in length to bring water from the Siverskyi Donets river in the north of the region to Yasynuvata near Donetsk city. Image
Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 4
1/ A senior Russian officer was reportedly killed by his own men after boasting that he would be promoted for sending them to die in assaults, and declaring that he would bring funeral notices to their families and "fuck their wives". He allegedly profited from their deaths. ⬇️ Image
2/ In November 2024, the Russian army announced that Colonel Yevgeny Borisovich Ladnov had "died near Luhansk near Kreminna as a result of artillery shelling on 10 November 2024." He was the commander of the 19th Tank Regiment (military unit 12322).
3/ A man who served under Ladnov, Junior Sergeant Andrey Mikhailovich Perevoshchikov, has given an account of what he says happened to the colonel. According to Perevoshchikov, Ladnov was deliberately sending his men to their deaths en masse and told them so in blunt terms:
Read 29 tweets

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