Europe | Freedom on the line

Ukraine’s convicts take the fight inside Russia

A hard-bitten officer commands a unit of felons—and dreams of kebabs in Moscow

Prisoners listen to a Ukrainian sergeant of the Battalion Arey during an interview in a prison, in the Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukraine
Photograph: AP
|Sumy region

LAUGHTER CUTS through the crunch of gravel as Senior Lieutenant Nazariy Kishak’s jeep arrives. He is four hours late. “It was a shitstorm,” he says, grinning under his crooked boxer’s nose. “A column with 70 Chechens. All with Saint Peter now.” The enemy had been trying to cross the border just north of his unit’s new entry point into Russia.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Freedom on the line”

From the August 17th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Gisele Pelicot at the courthouse in Avignon

A harrowing rape trial in France has revived debate about consent

Anything less than yes is no

Illustration of a silhouette of a wolf howling at the moon, standing on a hill with mountains and trees in the background. Overlaid on the wolf is a green crosshair, suggesting it's being targeted. Surrounding the wolf is a circle of yellow stars

How the wolf went from folktale villain to culture-war scapegoat

The startling return of wolves in Europe raises hackles


Ferry housing asylum seekers in Rotterdam, Netherlands

The Netherlands’ new hard-right government is a mess

Conflicts over asylum, farms and the constitution could bring it down


Ukraine’s Roma have suffered worse than most in the war

Half of them may have fled

Pedro Sánchez clings to office at a cost to Spain’s democracy

His opponents accuse him of subverting the constitution