Mortal regiment
A special project about how the Kremlin has forbidden families of soldiers killed in the war in Ukraine to mourn

A year ago, the Russian authorities announced mobilisation. This was a turning point in the invasion of Ukraine: the war came out of the television and into Russians’ homes. Soon, many soldiers began returning from the front — in zinc coffins. The relatives of the dead, who began to ask awkward questions, were told to keep silent and be content with “death compensation” payments. Even the “Immortal Regiment”, Russia’s largest annual event honouring the memory of its war dead, was cancelled.
The Kremlin has nurtured its militarist “cult of victory” for years, and when the right moment came, it sent tens of thousands of Russian soldiers to die in a foreign country.
The army has refused to engage with soldiers’ mothers, who face prosecution for “discrediting the armed forces”, being denounced and sometimes even being branded “foreign agents” if they decided to speak out.









