Ukraine (SBU) said the troops, also known as Kadyrovites, had returned to Chechnya's capital Grozny. The SBU said that the soldiers had been pulled out after enduring a high death toll in the first three weeks of the war, reports The Mirror.
Reports of Chechen troops participating in Russia's invasion of Ukraine began in the first days of the Russian invasion on February 24.Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov promised earlier this month to "finish" anyone refusing to surrender and boasted about his troops forcing Ukrainian soldiers to flee.On February 26, a video began circulating of Chechen servicemen hoisting a Russian flag on a military unit building in Gostomel, a village 50 kilometres northwest of the Ukrainian capital.The Armed Forces of Ukraine authenticated the video, but denied the claims within it that they had fought off three Ukrainian advances - saying that the area invaded was empty at the time.A day later, three days after the invasion began, commander of the 141st Motorized Regiment of the Chechen Rosguard, General Magomed Tushayev, died.During efforts to land at Gostomel airport from February 26 and 28, "several hundred" Chechen fighters lost their lives, SBU intelligence officers say.A large column of what appeared to be Kadyrovites fighters and military machines was then filmed in Bucha, north of Kyiv.Subsequent video emerged of airstrikes being launched at it and the wreckage of many of the army vehicles.Kadyrov, who is President of Chechnya, initially denied casualties among his fighters, but on February 28 he acknowledged the deaths of two Chechen servicemen, while not giving their names."Unfortunately, there are casualties among the natives of the Chechen Republic.
Read more on dailystar.co.uk