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​​Solidarity Zone supports Kirill Butylin, the author of the first known arson of a military enlistment office after the start of the war in Ukraine. And you can support him too!

On February 28, 4 days after the full-scale invasion of the Russian army into Ukraine, 21-year-old Kirill Butylin threw Molotov cocktails at the military enlistment office in Lukhovitsy near Moscow.

A video of the attack and the arsonist's manifesto surfaced online on March 8.

The author said that he painted the gates of the military registration and enlistment office in the colors of the Ukrainian flag and wrote: “I will not go to kill my brothers!” After which he climbed the fence, doused the facade with gasoline, broke the windows and threw Molotov cocktails into them. The insurgent saw his goal as the destruction of the archive with the personal files of conscripts, which, according to his data, is located in this part. He hoped that this would hinder mobilization in the district. The partisan also stated in his manifesto: “I hope that I will not see my classmates in captivity or lists of the dead.
I think it needs to be shared. Ukrainians will know that in Russia they are fighting for them, not everyone is afraid and not everyone is indifferent. Our protesters must be inspired and act more decisively. And this should break the spirit of the Russian army and government even more.”

Butylin was detained on the day the manifesto was published. After the arson, he got rid of his phone and managed to get to the border of Lithuania and Belarus, Vremya MSK and Moskovsky Komsomolets claimed, but he was detained there. Butylin allegedly admitted that he wanted to go to fight in Ukraine. The young man was promptly extradited to Russia and taken to the police station in Lukhovitsy.

On March 13, Kirill managed to escape. He took advantage of the moment when they let him go to the toilet: being without handcuffs, he jumped out the window. Then Kirill climbed over the fence and ran towards the M5 highway. Soon he was arrested again.

During the existence of the case against Kirill Butylin, the accusation has grown from “vandalism” to “terrorist attack”. And if initially Kirill was threatened with no more than 3 years of corrective labor, now he faces 10 to 15 years in prison.

In October, Solidarity Zone tracked down Kirill Butylin in the Matrosskaya Tishina pre-trial detention center in Moscow and established contact with him. Kirill accepted the offer of support and said that he would be happy with publicity, letters and books. The rest, he says, he does not need. Kirill's lawyer is paid by his relatives.

Solidarity Zone already supports Kirill Butylin and will continue to cover his case, as well as provide all necessary assistance.

You can also support Kirill — write a letter, send a book (we recommend that you first find out in a letter about the preferred literature and possible methods of sending) or tell about his case.

✉️📦 Address for letters and parcels:
107076, Moscow, Matrosskaya Silence st., 18, SIZO-1,
Butylin Kirill Vladimirovich
born in 2001

(It is possible to send letters through the service "FSIN-letter" and the volunteer resource "RosUznik".)

Solidarity without borders!

#english



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​​Solidarity Zone supports Kirill Butylin, the author of the first known arson of a military enlistment office after the start of the war in Ukraine. And you can support him too!

On February 28, 4 days after the full-scale invasion of the Russian army into Ukraine, 21-year-old Kirill Butylin threw Molotov cocktails at the military enlistment office in Lukhovitsy near Moscow.

A video of the attack and the arsonist's manifesto surfaced online on March 8.

The author said that he painted the gates of the military registration and enlistment office in the colors of the Ukrainian flag and wrote: “I will not go to kill my brothers!” After which he climbed the fence, doused the facade with gasoline, broke the windows and threw Molotov cocktails into them. The insurgent saw his goal as the destruction of the archive with the personal files of conscripts, which, according to his data, is located in this part. He hoped that this would hinder mobilization in the district. The partisan also stated in his manifesto: “I hope that I will not see my classmates in captivity or lists of the dead.
I think it needs to be shared. Ukrainians will know that in Russia they are fighting for them, not everyone is afraid and not everyone is indifferent. Our protesters must be inspired and act more decisively. And this should break the spirit of the Russian army and government even more.”

Butylin was detained on the day the manifesto was published. After the arson, he got rid of his phone and managed to get to the border of Lithuania and Belarus, Vremya MSK and Moskovsky Komsomolets claimed, but he was detained there. Butylin allegedly admitted that he wanted to go to fight in Ukraine. The young man was promptly extradited to Russia and taken to the police station in Lukhovitsy.

On March 13, Kirill managed to escape. He took advantage of the moment when they let him go to the toilet: being without handcuffs, he jumped out the window. Then Kirill climbed over the fence and ran towards the M5 highway. Soon he was arrested again.

During the existence of the case against Kirill Butylin, the accusation has grown from “vandalism” to “terrorist attack”. And if initially Kirill was threatened with no more than 3 years of corrective labor, now he faces 10 to 15 years in prison.

In October, Solidarity Zone tracked down Kirill Butylin in the Matrosskaya Tishina pre-trial detention center in Moscow and established contact with him. Kirill accepted the offer of support and said that he would be happy with publicity, letters and books. The rest, he says, he does not need. Kirill's lawyer is paid by his relatives.

Solidarity Zone already supports Kirill Butylin and will continue to cover his case, as well as provide all necessary assistance.

You can also support Kirill — write a letter, send a book (we recommend that you first find out in a letter about the preferred literature and possible methods of sending) or tell about his case.

✉️📦 Address for letters and parcels:
107076, Moscow, Matrosskaya Silence st., 18, SIZO-1,
Butylin Kirill Vladimirovich
born in 2001

(It is possible to send letters through the service "FSIN-letter" and the volunteer resource "RosUznik".)

Solidarity without borders!

#english

BY Зона солидарности




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You may recall that, back when Facebook started changing WhatsApp’s terms of service, a number of news outlets reported on, and even recommended, switching to Telegram. Pavel Durov even said that users should delete WhatsApp “unless you are cool with all of your photos and messages becoming public one day.” But Telegram can’t be described as a more-secure version of WhatsApp. A Russian Telegram channel with over 700,000 followers is spreading disinformation about Russia's invasion of Ukraine under the guise of providing "objective information" and fact-checking fake news. Its influence extends beyond the platform, with major Russian publications, government officials, and journalists citing the page's posts. Right now the digital security needs of Russians and Ukrainians are very different, and they lead to very different caveats about how to mitigate the risks associated with using Telegram. For Ukrainians in Ukraine, whose physical safety is at risk because they are in a war zone, digital security is probably not their highest priority. They may value access to news and communication with their loved ones over making sure that all of their communications are encrypted in such a manner that they are indecipherable to Telegram, its employees, or governments with court orders. For tech stocks, “the main thing is yields,” Essaye said. Recently, Durav wrote on his Telegram channel that users' right to privacy, in light of the war in Ukraine, is "sacred, now more than ever."
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