The Kremlin has not yet studied the content of the video address published the day before by the "SVO" veteran Alexander Lunin to Vladimir Putin, in which he warns of the possibility of a military mutiny, said presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov on Friday. Russian media report this, writes UNN.
Details
"We were told that such an address exists, but we have not yet had time to familiarize ourselves with it. Therefore, I would not say anything. Judging by your words, there are some rather strange formulations, we need to first familiarize ourselves," the Kremlin representative told journalists.
Later it became known that Lunin will meet with a pro-Kremlin informer
According to former participant of the war in Ukraine Alexander Lunin (Pustovalov), he was invited to Moscow.
"Vitaly Borodin contacted me. They invited me to Moscow to voice my problems, all those issues that have accumulated. Now I am looking for a car and we are leaving," Lunin said in a new video.
Media suggest that this refers to pro-Kremlin activist Vitaly Borodin, who heads the so-called "Federal Project for Security and Anti-Corruption." This organization, like Borodin himself, is officially not affiliated with the Kremlin, but is known for filing denunciations against various public and cultural figures.
Addition
On June 25, 39-year-old participant of the war against Ukraine Alexander Lunin published an address to Putin on social media, in which he complained about the cruel treatment of servicemen by commanders and extortion of money, insisted on a personal meeting with the president on state TV, and stated that the army would "turn its weapons against the Kremlin" if complaints were ignored. The author of the video, who bore the surname Pustovalov until 2023, previously served as a rifleman and later as a commander of an intelligence unit in the volunteer battalion named after Sudoplatov.