Russia

The lists of Russia’s war dead may be hundreds and thousands of names long but some casualties stand out to the journalists who painstakingly compile them.Olga Ivshina, a senior reporter at the BBC Russian Service, can instantly recall Mikhail Shuvalov, a retired power plant worker who volunteered to fight in Ukraine at the age of 71.

David Frenkel, a data reporter for the independent Russian news outlet Mediazona, remembers Alexander Zhmur, a 19-year-old paratrooper who met the grim fate foreshadowed by his last name, Russian slang for “corpse.”For Elena Trifonova, co-founder and editor of Siberian news website Lyudi Baikala, tallying the local men killed early in the conflict swiftly became a blur.

Nearly every soldier from Russia's Far Eastern regions of Irkutsk and Buryatia had the same obituary: he graduated high school, joined the army and died in Ukraine.With the Russian government seldom disclosing the death toll from its war in Ukraine, independent journalists have spent the past year identifying, verifying and counting the fallen themselves.

The endeavor has become so mammoth that Mediazona, one of the news outlets behind the initiative, issued a call earlier this month for more volunteers.“It’s not happy work, but somebody has to do it.

We want to show the public that even for patriotic Russia, for pro-Putin Russia, war has a cost and that cost is Russian soldiers,” Frenkel said. A nationwide database jointly maintained by Mediazona and the BBC’s Russian service has confirmed over 15,000 fatalities since launching last spring, though Frenkel estimates the true number to be at least twice as large.Lyudi Baikala has verified nearly 750 deaths from the area of Siberia it covers, most of them from the heavily mobilized republic of Buryatia.

Pskovskaya Guberniya, a local newspaper in Russia’s western Pskov region, has tallied the local death count to number 142. The Russian Defense Ministry last released an official death toll — 5,937 troops — in September.

Western officials believe at least 200,000 Russians have been killed or wounded in Ukraine in the past year.Svetlana Avanesova, an editor at Pskovskaya Guberniya, said the publication’s small staff tries to monitor deaths every day, combing through increasingly rare announcements by the regional governor and social media posts from grieving relatives.In some cases, reporters have discovered or confirmed casualties through fundraisers for surviving family members and the renaming of local streets to honor fallen soldiers, Avanesova said.The newspaper initially set out to gauge “the scale of the lies” told by the authorities as they sought to minimize the death count, she said, but obtaining information has become increasingly difficult. “We are doing this for history, for us to understand and our readers to understand the toll,” Avanesova said.

“We don’t know what kind of history Russia will write … but no one else in the Pskov region is doing this or writing about it.”Ivshina also kept Russia’s historical obfuscation of war fatalities in mind when she began tracking casualties for the BBC Russian service in March. A wooden coffin is placed into a hearse.Roman Yarovitcyn / AP / TASSThere is still no definitive count of exactly how many perished in World War II, the Soviet-Afghan War, or Russia’s military campaigns in Chechnya, she said.

Government-reported losses in the First Chechen War, for example, were less than half the figure calculated by human rights groups, she said.“For this war, we can at least have a figure that's not an estimate, that's 100% verified,” Ivshina said.Russia’s efforts to downplay its human losses in Ukraine have grown more pronounced as the fighting drags into its second year, Ivshina said. Deaths that were once announced by regional governors and state news agencies are now left largely to local media outlets and low-level village officials, schools, community organizations, and even libraries, she said.Ivshina spends a lot of time sifting through information gleaned from about 70 cemeteries across the country.

Grave sites typically show that for every publicly named soldier buried in Russia, another is laid to rest quietly, their name absent from any open sources, she said. During the first six months of the war, headstones would display a photo of the soldier in uniform but that practice has stopped, Ivshina said.Documenting losses has also revealed other trends.

For example, the high rate of officers killed at the start of Russia's full-scale invasion meant there were insufficient resources to properly train new recruits — fueling higher casualties later in the war. Mediazona does not publish the names of troops killed in Ukraine but Russians are able to search for their loved ones through a Telegram bot created by volunteers, said Frenkel.Anti-war volunteers also work inside Russia, roaming cemeteries to take photos of fresh graves.

Their names are kept hidden, from each other and the outlet’s staff, due to the legal dangers inherent for anyone gathering data about the Russian military, he said.Frenkel, the technical lead for the project, creates visualizations from their contributions and is trying to find ways to automate the process of finding and verifying deaths. “We understand that it’s not possible to manually continue this work for years,” Frenkel said. “We are not going to stop.

But rationally, I understand that at some point, probably even if the war is not ended, it might just be extremely hard for team members to keep working on the same thing.”Many of the project's volunteers are upset by the work, he said.

Frenkel also finds his role mentally taxing — if only to a point.“It’s sad to scroll through a lot of dead faces but it’s much more depressing to read about Bucha, for example, or about the people who died in Mariupol,” he said.

“It’s incomparable to the atrocities committed by Russian troops in Ukraine.”One journalist manually updates the list maintained by Lyudi Baikala, according to editor Trifonova.

For her too, it’s traumatic, she said.“Morally, it’s very difficult,” Trifonova said.

“You cannot get used to this.”The list has been growing fast in recent months, with the publication’s staff confirming about 40 deaths per week compared to around 20 at the beginning of the war. The numbers seem to rise and fall in tandem with Russian offensives, Trifonova said, though the fatalities usually trickle in months later because it takes time for bodies to be repatriated.The “enormous” toll the war has taken locally — at least 544 men from Buryatia and 203 from the Irkutsk region — was impossible to imagine when journalists began covering local funerals and compiling a record in April, Trifonova said. The publication doesn’t want the authorities to be able to say “we don’t have large losses,” she said.Lyudi Baikala has pledged to continue tracking deaths no matter how long the war lasts or how hard and time-consuming the work becomes, Tirfonova said, adding that she hoped to eventually break through the state’s powerful propaganda which has convinced so many Russians of the war’s legitimacy.“Nobody wants the war but many believe this war was necessary,” Tirfonova said. “Well let them look at the lists of the dead and think about how necessary it was.”





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues-Publication from Jan 2021


Buy Our Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting



It's Voluntary! Take care of your Family, Friends and People around You First and later think about us. Its Fine if you dont wish to contribute and if you wish to contribute then think about the Homeless first and Feed them. We can survive with your wishes too :-). You can Buy our Merchandise too which are of the finest quality.

Debit/Credit/UPI

UPI/Debit/Credit

Paytm


STRIPE


[Russia] - Poland Arrests Man Over Suspected Russian Plan To Kill Zelensky


[Russia] - Memorial to Russian Sailors Lists 19 Casualties in Moskva Sinking-- Reports


Kamchatka's Glaciers Have Shrunk by 36% Since 1950 – Russian Scientists


[Russia] - Kremlin Slams France's Seizure of Russia-Linked Villa


[Russia] - Less Russians Getting Married Despite State's Encouragement to Start Families –-- Official Data


Worker at Russian Military?s Patriot Park Accused of Treason ? BBC


[Russia] - Kremlin Says U.S. Aid for Ukraine Won't Change Military Situation


??Palestinian Refugees to Assemble ?Jihad Mobiles? for Chechen Military


[Russia] - Ukraine Says Hit Russian Airfield in Annexed Crimea


[Russia] - Russian Court Upholds 4-Year Sentence for Prominent Bashkir Activist


[Russia] - Top Russian Hypersonic Scientist Sentenced to 7 Years for Treason


Germany Arrests 2 Over Military Base Attack Plot for Russia


At Least 7 People Killed in Russian Floods ? IStories


Russian Shelling Kills 2 in East Ukraine


Russian Missile Barrage on Ukraine City Kills 18


[Russia] - 20K Rally in Georgia as MPs Advance Controversial 'Foreign Influence' Law


'Dirty as Hell': Coal Dust Chokes Murmansk as Moscow Ramps Up Asia Exports


Putin Calls To Protect Flood-Hit Areas From Looting


Russia Labels 3 More Human Rights Groups 'Undesirable'


Record Number of Russian Soldiers Convicted of Murder in 2023 ? Data


[Russia] - Russia Arrests Four Accused of Helping Ukraine Army


[Russia] - Yulia Navalnaya Appears on Time's '100 Most Influential People' List


Russian Court Orders Review of Verdict Against Scientist


Sakha Rights Official Calls on Russia To Criminalize Domestic Abuse


[Russia] - Russian Peacekeepers Withdrawing From Nagorno-Karabakh, Kremlin Confirms


[Russia] - Russian Missile Barrage on Ukraine City Kills 17


[Russia] - 50K Russian Soldiers Confirmed Killed in Ukraine-- Independent Tally


[Russia] - Airports in Russia's Volga Region Halt Flights Over Drone Threat


Telegram's Durov Tells Tucker Carlson That Kremlin Pressure Forced Him Out of Russia


[Russia] - Russian-Backed Official Survives Assassination Attempt in Occupied Ukraine, Colleague Says


[Russia] - Russia's Orenburg Holds WWII Victory Parade Rehearsals Amid Flood Crisis


[Russia] - Russia But Not Putin Invited To French D-Day Anniversary-- Organizers


[Russia] - Putin Urges Restraint in Call With Iran's Raisi


[Russia] - She Photographed Russian Political Prisoners. Now She's Charged With 'Extremism.'


IMF Raises Russia?s Growth Forecast for 2024


[Russia] - Raiffeisen Touts Russia 'Expansion' in Job Ads Despite Intended Exit-- FEET


Russia Says Arrested Man Behind Car Bomb Attack on Ukrainian Defector


Talks for New Black Sea Shipping Deal Collapsed in March ? Reuters


[Russia] - Moscow Court Arrests in Absentia Exiled Journalist Zygar


[Russia] - More Evacuations in Russia's Urals, Western Siberia as Water Levels Rise


Russia Adds Theater Director Berkovich, Playwright Petriychuk to ?Terrorists and Extremists? List


TikTok Users Turn Russian Pro-War Song Into ?LGBT Anthem?


Russia's Novosibirsk Bans Migrants From Working as Taxi Drivers


[Russia] - Veteran Rights Activist Orlov Transferred Before Prison Sentence Begins


[Russia] - Partial Dam Collapse in Siberia's Tomsk Region as River Swells


[Russia] - Russian Shelling Kills 4 in Ukraine's Donetsk Region


China Disguising Imported Russian Copper as Scrap to Avoid Sanctions ? Reuters


?Everything?s Lost?: Russians Mourn Flooded Homes


[Russia] - Russian Regional Governor Predicts 'Very Difficult' Flood Situation


Ukraine Says Strengthening Defenses in Battered Frontline Town


Russia Urges ?Restraint? After Iranian Attack on Israel


Russia Halts Flights to Israel, Jordan, Iran Following Attack on Israel


[Russia] - Kyiv Says Eastern Front 'Deteriorated' as Russia Claims Village


[Russia] - 'There Will Be No Beautiful Russia of the Future Unless We Take Responsibility': Activist Anastasia Shevchenko


[Russia] - U.S., U.K. Widen Ban on Russian Metals in Bid to Disrupt Revenues


[Russia] - Russian Military Boosts Call-Ups for Annual Reservist Training Exercises


[Russia] - Tajikistan Condemns Alleged Torture of Crocus Attack Suspects


[Russia] - Murmansk Governor Discharged From Hospital After Knife Attack


Car Bomb Reportedly Injures Former Ukrainian Agent in Moscow


[Russia] - Belgium Probing Russian 'Interference' in European Parliament, PM Says


[Russia] - Russia, Ukraine Swap 122 Fallen Soldiers' Bodies


[Russia] - Russian Priests Fight River Flooding With Prayer From Above


[Russia] - 'Nobody Will Ever Find You': An FSB Torture Survivor Tells His Story


Russian Official Accused of Same-Sex Relationship Resigns


Russia Sends Instructors, Air Defense System to Niger


Russia?s Orenburg Orders Mass Evacuation as City Braces for Flood Peak


The Kremlin?s Creeping Nationalizations Hit Chelyabinsk Businesses


Navalny's Posthumous Memoir ‘Patriot& to Be Published This Fall


Russia Seizes Country?s Largest Winemaker Amid Re-Nationalization Wave ? RBC


Russia?s FSB Says Foiled Ukrainian Landing Attempt in Kherson Region


[Russia] - Kremlin Calls on Iran and Israel to Exercise ‘& lsquo; Restraint'


Russia Successfully Launches Angara A5 Rocket on Third Attempt


[Russia] - Orenburg Mayor Urges Evacuations as Ural River Nears 'Critical' Levels


Kyiv Adopts Mobilization Law as Moscow Strikes Facilities Across Country


Russian Security Agents Say Killed 2 Militants in North Caucasus Anti-Terrorism Operation


[Russia] - 3 Killed by Ukrainian Drone Attack Inside Russia-- Governor


[Russia] - Moscow Slams Planned Ukraine Peace Summit as U.S. 'Project'


Jailed Russian Nationalist Girkin Seeking to Fight in Eastern Ukraine Despite Ban


[Russia] - Russian Attack Helicopter Crashes Near Annexed Crimea


[Russia] - Russia Charges Exiled Feminist Activist With 'Justifying Terrorism'-- Reports


'Devastating to See': Russia&s Orenburg Region Battles Historic Flood


Russia Targets Ukrainian Energy Sites in Overnight Attacks


Russian Billionaires Fridman, Aven Win EU Sanctions Appeal


Russia Jails 2 Men for Trying to Join Anti-Kremlin Militia


Russia Issues Arrest Warrant for Exiled Feminist Poet Daria Serenko


[Russia] - Almost a Month After Putin's Re-Election, EU Parliament Split on How To Reject Its Legitimacy


Navalny Ally Chanysheva Jailed 9.5 Years After Retrial for ?Extremism?


[Russia] - Russia Says Investigating Senior U.S., NATO Officials for 'Financing Terrorism'


Russian Court Sentences Driver Who Struck Poet Lev Rubinstein


'Critical' Russian Floods Threaten Urals, Western Siberia as Waters Recede From Early Epicenter


[Russia] - Zelensky Inspects Fortifications Around Kharkiv Amid Russian Attacks


[Russia] - Ukrainian Artillery Strike Kills 2 in Russian Border Region


[Russia] - China, Russia Say To Strengthen Cooperation in Lavrov Visit


[Russia] - Russia Aborts Spacecraft Launch for Second Day in a Row





66