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Relatives deeply despaired after sinking Russian warship: 'All information is hidden from us' | BT Udland - www.bt.dk It is now 34 days since the Russian missile cruiser 'Moscow' sank in the Black Sea. Initially, the Russian military stated that the nearly 500 crew had been rescued in good condition. It was then corrected that one soldier had died while 27 others were missing - the other 396 on board were rescued. A few days later, the Russian navy showed off the ship's crew at a parade in the port city of Sevastopol. However, only 100 sailors took part, and there has therefore been skepticism as to whether the crew in Moscow have actually been rescued safely. Since then, no new information has come from the official Russian team. And it has made relatives get a suspicion: “Of course they spoke heads - and they know how many have died. But they give me no information - they tell me nothing. All information is hidden from us. ”This is what a mother of a conscript who was on board the ship said in an anonymous interview with the Russian media. It writes. When the war began, Russian authorities assured others - including President Vladimir Putin - that conscripts would not take part in the so-called 'special operation' in Ukraine. 34 days after the Russian missile cruiser was sunk, only one death is still confirmed. 27 are still missing according to the Russian defense. Later, they have had to admit that this was the case anyway, of which it has been revealed that about 300 of the crew on 'Moscow' were conscripts. However, the number of people on board the ship and the deaths are still not fully agreed upon. Lithuania's defense minister has claimed there were 485 on board. Of them, it sounds like 54 of the crew were evacuated to a Turkish ship in the Black Sea. The independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta Europe has reported that 40 sailors lost their lives. Meduza writes that according to their sources it is 37. According to the Ukrainian army, the sinking is due to the ship being hit by their missiles. But the Russian military has pure rejection. The Russian explanation is instead that a fire on board led to an explosion in the ship's ammunition depot. The warship sank on April 14. SPORT B.T.'s verdict B.T.'s verdict ABROAD See the documentation SPORT ABROAD Giant overview Close friend: ABROAD B.T. reveals Experts UKRAINE ABROAD Berlingske Media A / S Pilestræde 34 DK-1147 Copenhagen KTlf. +45 33 75 75 33 CVR.no .: 29 20 73 13

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