Fourteen-year-old Russian schoolboy David learned something new this month: firing accurately with a Kalashnikov is trickier than with a pistol. With other pupils, he got to try out the weapons as part of basic military training – a feature of the school programme that was dropped in the final years of the Soviet Union but has been reintroduced since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine. In the southern city of Vladikavkaz this month teenage boys in camouflage uniform took turns at firing weapons and practising first aid under the eye of instructors. “It’s easier to fire a pistol. And it’s more difficult to take aim with an assault rifle,” said David, a lanky boy with black hair and glasses. He said the firearms practice would “make life easier” for him in the future. Military service is compulsory for young men in Russia, whose war in Ukraine is now well into its third year. Sergei Menyailo, a retired vice-admiral who is now the leader of Russia’s North Ossetia region, referred to the conflict in remarks to the youngsters, telling them the training would help them “to fulfil your military duty within a team” if they had to fight one day.
متعلقہ مضامین
-
Rawalpindi man killed during TikTok stunt on railway track
-
Cracks appear in PDM over plan to oust govt
-
Covid-19 claims 43 lives, infects 1,927 more across country
-
Masood for projecting Kashmir issue through parliamentary diplomacy
-
Balochistan fishermen warned of hurricane
-
Broadsheet issue exposes politics of NRO: Shibli
-
Balochistan fishermen warned of hurricane
-
Are we Thorndike’s Cats and Pavlov’s Dogs?
-
NLC transports 600,000 tons of wheat from ports to upcountry
-
Trees are an important part of our community
-
Quality of education at door step of remote deserted village Drigh Bala
-
Politics over human rights bill is shameful: Shireen Mazari