‼️“People were being zeroed out in front of me. I saw our own men killing them. They swore they would kill me too” — serviceman Nikita Nekrasov speaks about what was happening in his unit.

Russian serviceman Nikita Nekrasov, born on August 12, 2005, reported horrifying abuse and lawlessness inside the military unit where he served near Vovchansk. According to him, during his mandatory military service he was forced into a contract, but the document, he claims, was signed not by him, and he is demanding an investigation into the forged signature.

But according to Nekrasov, the real nightmare began afterward.

He claims that servicemen are not being paid their salaries, wounded soldiers are denied compensation, and many are refused proper medical treatment or transfer to hospitals. Soldiers, he says, are treated as disposable material expected to die silently without asking questions.

Nekrasov stated that a landmine was tied to him personally, and he was sent on a mission to blow up Ukrainian fortifications. He survived only because he managed to detach the explosive device himself.

Even more disturbing are his allegations about executions inside the unit. Nekrasov says he witnessed the murder of his friend after the serviceman called the parents of dead soldiers to inform them about the deaths and compensation they were entitled to.

“A commander, a colonel, shot him in the head and said nobody would receive any payments.”

Nekrasov also claims that servicemen were being killed by their own comrades, while anyone attempting to tell the truth or file complaints was threatened with weapons and “zeroing out.” According to him, soldiers had their belongings confiscated, being left only with a phone and passport.

Fearing for his life, Nekrasov fled the unit and is now seeking protection and a response from the military prosecutor’s office.

“At any moment people from my unit can come, take me away, and simply zero me out. I’m afraid to return.”

And now the main question is whether the prosecutor’s office will react at all. Because if even after allegations of forged contracts, unpaid salaries, killings of servicemen by their own commanders, and attempts to use soldiers as disposable suicide tools the system remains silent, it would mean only one thing: this terror is not the initiative of individual officers, but a directive coming from above.

If the state ignores such crimes, then the system is not fighting lawlessness — it is managing it.

And then another inevitable question arises: what happens after an entire generation of men is ground down by such methods? With this approach, future waves of mobilization may eventually extend to women as well, because a machine accustomed to consuming its own population never stops on its own.

Source: Telegram channel “Do Not Expect Good News”
https://t.me/ne_zhdi_novosti/5325

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