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Kremlin critic killer released from jail to fight in Ukraine

11.08.2024 12:30
A man convicted in the killing of a prominent Russian opposition politician has been discharged from jail after signing a contract to join the military operation in Ukraine, Russia’s state-run news agency TASS reported on Saturday.
Convicts in the Nemtsov murder case Khamzat Bakhayev (L), Tamerlan Eskerkhanov (C) and Shadid Gubashev (R) listen to a sentence at the Moscow district military court in Moscow, Russia, 13 July 2017. The court sentenced Khamzat Bakhayev to eleven, Temirlan Eskerkhanov to fourteen and Shadid Gubashev to 16 years in jail.
Convicts in the Nemtsov murder case Khamzat Bakhayev (L), Tamerlan Eskerkhanov (C) and Shadid Gubashev (R) listen to a sentence at the Moscow district military court in Moscow, Russia, 13 July 2017. The court sentenced Khamzat Bakhayev to eleven, Temirlan Eskerkhanov to fourteen and Shadid Gubashev to 16 years in jail.Photo: EPA/YURI KOCHETKOV; PAP/EPA.

Tamerlan Eskerkhanov, who was convicted as an accomplice and jailed for 14 years for murdering Boris Nemtsov, president Vladimir Putin's critic, "signed a contract with the defence ministry in March 2024, was pardoned, and then released from his penal colony," TASS wrote.

"He went to one of the assault units and is now carrying out combat missions in the special military operation zone,” it added.

Former deputy prime minister under president Boris Yeltsin, Nemtsov was shot dead in 2015 as he walked across a bridge near the Kremlin in the heart of the Russian capital.

The other convicts jailed over Nemtsov's killing were still in jail because they had refused to sign contracts with the military, according to Reuters.

Ilya Yashin, Nemtsov's one-time spokesman who was freed last week in a high-profile prisoner exchange between Russia, Belarus, the United States and several European countries, called Eskerkhanov's release "scorn for memory of my dead friend."

Tens of thousands of Russian prisoners have volunteered to join the Russian army fighting in Ukraine, taking advantage of an offer of clemency for those who survive their stints at the front.

The recruitment of prisoners was initially pioneered by the Wagner mercenary group, whose leader Yevgeny Prigozhin was killed in an August 2023 plane crash after a failed mutiny against Russia's military leadership.

(mo)

Source: Reuters