An anti-Kremlin activist forcibly conscripted to an Arctic military base was kidnapped, his say allies

Ruslan Shaveddinov, a colleague of Alexei Navalny was detained at his Moscow, and turned up at a remote military base on Novaya Zemlya.

By Andrew Osborn, Reuters December 26, 2019
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MOSCOW — Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny said on Wednesday that the forcible military conscription of one of his allies to a remote air base in the Arctic amounted to kidnapping and illegal imprisonment.

Ruslan Shaveddinov, a project manager at Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, was detained at his Moscow flat on Monday after the door was broken down, the electricity cut, and the SIM card on his mobile phone remotely disabled.

On Tuesday evening, Shaveddinov resurfaced at a remote military base on Novaya Zemlya, an archipelago in the Arctic Ocean some 2,000 kilometers (1,240 miles) north of Moscow and the location of a missile air defense unit.

Navalny said Shaveddinov, who had earlier tried to appeal his conscription on medical grounds, had managed to make one phone call on Wednesday using someone else’s phone.

He said he had been told he would not be allowed to have a mobile phone during his one year of military service and said another soldier had been assigned to accompany him at all times to watch what he was doing.

Navalny said lawyers for Shaveddinov would be challenging his conscription and would argue he had been illegally kidnapped and imprisoned.

“Serving in the army has simply turned into a way of locking people up,” Navalny wrote on social media.

Opposition activists likened Shaveddinov’s treatment to the way in which Tsarist Russia and the former Soviet Union sent political opponents to far-off corners of what is the world’s largest country by territory.

Shaveddinov was part of Navalny’s unsuccessful campaign to run against Vladimir Putin for the presidency in 2018, worked as a TV presenter for Navalny’s online channel, and helped manage projects at Navalny’s foundation which specializes in publishing corruption investigations into state officials and managers.

Valentina Melnikova, head of the Union of Soldiers’ Mothers’ Committees, told Reuters she had serious doubts about the way Shaveddinov had been treated.

“This is definitely illegal,” she said.

But Colonel Maxim Loktev, the deputy military commissar for Moscow, told the TASS news agency that Shaveddinov had dodged mandatory conscription for a long time and that a court on Monday had ruled his conscription legal.

One year’s military service is mandatory in Russia for all male citizens aged 18–27, with some narrow exceptions.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Shaveddinov’s treatment looked legal if he’d been a draft dodger.

“If he evaded conscription, he broke the relevant law of the Russian Federation,” said Peskov. “If he dodged conscription and was conscripted in this way then everything was done strictly in accordance with the law.”

Additional reporting by Andrey Ostroukh and Maria Vasilyeva.