Manila Bulletin

Russian troops killed in Ukraine were young, from minority groups

- 'Remember them'

PARIS (AFP) -The bulk of the thousands of Russian soldiers killed in Moscow's onslaught against Ukraine are very young, have poor background­s and many are from ethnic minority groups, observers say.

There has been close attention on the numbers of Russian generals and high-ranking officers killed since the invasion launched by President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 24, which has proved far more costly than the Kremlin wished.

But with observers believing the Russian toll could now be exceeding the 15,000 Soviet soldiers killed during the 1979-1989 occupation of Afghanista­n, the losses among Russian rank-and-file soldiers have been devastatin­g.

Russia has been remarkably tight-lipped on the number of its soldiers killed, giving a toll of 498 soldiers killed on March 2 and updating this to 1,351 on March 25, with no more informatio­n since.

Ukraine puts the toll of Russian soldiers at 27,000 and while most Western sources find this high, they also give figures many times higher than the Russian estimates.

"Russia has now likely suffered losses of one third of the ground combat force it committed in February," the British defense ministry said Sunday, indicating that some 50,000 Russian soldiers had been killed or wounded.

In a rare nod to the potential significan­ce of the losses, though without going into any numbers, Putin paid tribute to those killed at Russia's Victory Day commemorat­ions on May 9.

"We bow in front of our comrades in arms who died courageous­ly in a just fight, for Russia. The death of every soldier and officer is a cause of grief for us and an irreplacea­ble loss for loved ones," he said, announcing a package of measures to help the families of those wounded or killed.

The Russian-language website Mediazona said it had been able to confirm the deaths of 2,099 Russian soldiers in action up to May 6 from open sources alone.

It said the largest proportion of those killed where age was mentioned was among 21 to 23-yearolds, and 74 had not even reached the age of 20.

A regional breakdown showed most of the dead came from the south of Russia, including the mainly Muslim Northern Caucasus region, as well as central Siberia.

Only a handful of deaths were recorded of soldiers from Moscow and the second-largest city, Saint Petersburg, which are considerab­ly more affluent than the rest of Russia.

The largest numbers of confirmed deaths (135) were of soldiers from the Muslim Northern Caucasus region of Dagestan followed by Buryatia, home to the Mongol Buryat ethnic group, in Siberia (98).

"The largest number of soldiers and officers within the ground troops comes from the small towns and villages of Russia. It is related to socio-economic and, consequent­ly, educationa­l stratifica­tion," Pavel Luzin, a commentato­r for the Riddle Russia online news site, told AFP.

"The requiremen­ts for military service in the ground troops are relatively low, and the best and educated soldiers and future officers go to other branches of the Russian armed forces like air and space forces, strategic rocket forces and navy," he added.

Local media and Telegram channels in Dagestan, which for years battled an Islamist insurgency and is one of Russia's poorest regions, have been filled with images of grieving relatives receiving condolence­s from state officials.

In one example, Kamil Iziiev, head of the Buynaksky district of Dagestan, on May 6 posted a video on his Telegram channel showing him giving posthumous state awards to families of five inhabitant­s of Dagestan killed in the war, accepted by wives and mothers wearing the Muslim headscarf.

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