Russian opposition campaigner press ganged into the military

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Russian opposition campaigner Ruslan Shaveddinov has been press ganged into the military and posted to a remote air base in the Arctic,
according to a leading anti-Putin politician
However the authorities insist Ruslan Shaveddinov had been trying to doge compulsory military service.Alexei Navalny said Mr Shaveddinov,
a project manager at Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation, was detained at his Moscow flat on Monday after the door was broken down, the
electricity cut, and the SIM card on his mobile phone remotely disabled.Image:Alexei Navalny (L) and Ruslan Shaveddinov in June
2017Shaveddinov resurfaced at a remote military base on Novaya Zemlya, a freezing archipelago in the Arctic Ocean some 2,000 km (1240 miles)
north of Moscow and the location of a missile air defence unit.Navalny said Shaveddinov, who had earlier tried to appeal his conscription on
medical grounds, had managed to make one phone call on Wednesday using someone else's phone.He said he had been told he would not be allowed
to have a mobile phone during his one year of military service and said another soldier had been assigned to accompany him at all times to
watch what he was doing.Image:The Novaya Zemlya air base in the ArcticNavalny said lawyers for Shaveddinov would be challenging his
conscription and would argue he had been illegally kidnapped and imprisoned."Serving in the army has simply turned into a way of locking
people up," Navalny wrote on social media.Opposition activists likened Shaveddinov's treatment to the way in which Tsarist Russia and the
former Soviet Union sent political opponents to far-off corners of what is the world's largest country by territory.Image:A supporter of
Ruslan Shaveddinov holds a banner claiming he has been kidnapped by the militaryShaveddinov was part of Navalny's unsuccessful campaign to
run against Vladimir Putin for the presidency in 2018.He worked as a TV presenter for Navalny's online channel, and helped manage projects
at Navalny's foundation which specialises in publishing corruption investigations into state officials and managers.Image:Police attempting
to arrest Ruslan Shaveddinov in June 2017But Colonel Maxim Loktev, the deputy military commissar for Moscow, told the TASS news agency that
Shaveddinov had dodged mandatory conscription for a long time and that a court on Monday had ruled his conscription legal.One year's
military service is mandatory in Russia for all male citizens aged 18-27, with some narrow exceptions.Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said
Shaveddinov's treatment looked legal if he'd been a draft dodger."If he evaded conscription, he broke the relevant law of the Russian
Federation," said Peskov
"If he dodged conscription and was conscripted in this way then everything was done strictly in accordance with the law."