The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

We’re Putin’s only opposition, say Russian soldiers fighting for Kyiv

- By Liz Cookman in Kyiv

UKRAINE’S Russian units said they are the only remaining opposition to Vladimir Putin as they pleaded with the West for military support.

Speaking from Russian territory on the biggest cross-border raid since the war began, commanders said they were attacking Russia to resist its president’s “perverted vision of the world”.

Three Ukrainian units made up of Russian citizens began an operation into the Kursk and Belgorod regions of Russia on Tuesday. It was launched to coincide with Russia’s elections, with polls open yesterday until Sunday.

It is part of a multi-pronged attack that includes Ukrainian drones shutting down three oil refineries deep within Russian territory.

Speaking from somewhere near Tyotkino, Aleksey Baranovsky, a former lawyer and political dissident who is now an LSR fighter, said they were seeking to interrupt the election and show there are still people willing to oppose “dictator” Putin.

“We are sending a message to those inside Russia, who are demoralise­d and lost since [Alexei] Navalny’s murder, that we are still here, willing to fight the regime,” he said. “We also want to show Western government­s and people, like those in the UK, that we are fighting the regime, the election is not legal and that, of course Putin will win, but he is not a legitimate leader,” he added.

Baranovsky urged the West to support their resistance movement “at least behind closed doors”.

Wearing a combat helmet and doused in red light, which is used for night vision on the battlefiel­d to conserve stealth, Denis Nikitin, founder of the RDK and a notorious extremist, spoke over a secure line from another secret location. Mr Nikitin said: “If the West wants to win this war, they should help us … the only real opposition to Putin is us, Russian citizens who took up arms and are fighting.” Nikitin, who also goes by the surname Kapustin and the call sign Rex after his white nationalis­t clothing brand, White Rex.

“People in the West should ask themselves – do they want to actually stop Putin or do they want to just pretend they’re helping?” he added.

European aid, Mr Nikitin said, would allow his unit to become more effective, but they would continue to carry out cross-border operations without it.

The LSR claims to have taken control of the Kursk settlement of Tyotkino, while all units have urged civilians to evacuate and Russian soldiers to surrender. A humanitari­an corridor came into force on Thursday night to allow civilians to leave the area.

Andriy Yusov, of Ukraine’s military intelligen­ce, said on Thursday evening that Kursk and Belgorod are now areas of “active combat actions”, but Moscow said yesterday that it had repelled all attempts by pro-Ukrainian fighters to capture territory.

High-profile opposition leader Mr Navalny died suddenly at a penal colony last month where he was serving a 30-year sentence. His family, allies and Western leaders have blamed Putin for his death.

Mr Navalny’s widow Yulia Navalnaya has urged Western countries not to recognise Putin as the legitimate leader of Russia following the elections.

Mr Nikitin, who said his unit is working separately to the other two units but to largely the same goals, said he did not agree with Navalny’s political style and that his peaceful methods were not effective.

“[Navalny] didn’t achieve anything, he just died after repeated torture in prison. The only language Putin understand­s is armed resistance,” he said. The RDK was recently added to Russia’s list of terrorist organisati­ons and Nikitin was sentenced in absentia to life in prison in November.

Born in Russia, the former mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter lived in Germany as a teenager. He moved to Ukraine in 2017, where he organised fight clubs, and was served a 10-year ban from Europe’s Schengen zone in 2019 for his ties to white nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis.

The Siberian Battalion, the most recent unit establishe­d for Russian nationals in Ukraine, is primarily for ethnic minorities from Siberia, including Buryats, Yakuts and Tuvans. It is their first operation and it is not clear how closely they work with the RDK.

The current cross-border operation follows similar incursions in spring and summer last year, which sought to put pressure on Russia by highlighti­ng that its national territory was poorly protected.

Meanwhile, the FSB security service said yesterday it had detained a man for allegedly trying to disrupt Russian air defence systems and a woman accused of preparing to attack railway infrastruc­ture near Ukraine.

The FSB announced the arrests of the Russian citizens as voting began in presidenti­al elections set to extend Vladimir Putin’s long rule.

 ?? ?? Denis Nikitin, founder of the Russian Volunteer Corps, doused in red light used for night vision
Denis Nikitin, founder of the Russian Volunteer Corps, doused in red light used for night vision

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