Russian courts received a record 20,040 petitions to declare individuals missing or dead last year, the independent news website Mediazona reported Monday, citing court documents.The figure is more than double the approximate 8,600 court filings in 2023, which Mediazona said was in line with annual numbers before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.Journalists linked the surge to the Russian militarys apparent efforts to replenish its ranks while avoiding salary payments to families of missing or deceased soldiers.
Some court rulings reviewed by Mediazona suggest army commanders sought to declare soldiers missing or dead in orderto remove them from unit rosters and accelerate recruitment.Such rulings also allow the military to halt salary payments to families.
While salaries continue if a soldier is listed as missing, they stop once a court formally declares them missing or dead.Families are eligible for 5 million rubles ($50,000) in compensation only if a court separately declares a soldier dead.Mediazona said the majority of the 20,040 court filings in 2024 concealed plaintiffs names.
However, the outlet was able to establish a military connection in 5,090 cases up from 500 in 2023 and only dozens in 2022.The courts avoid publicity by concealing claimants and withholding decisions.
This interferes with calculations because only circumstantial evidence singles out military cases, Mediazona said.The report comes more than a week after Mediazona and BBC Russia verified the names of more than 91,000 Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine since the start of the invasion nearly three years ago.
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