20/ He took the opportunity to escape. "I once overheard a major who was driving us to the construction site say: we'll do it anyway, so you'll go to war. I took this into account, because I was already mentally prepared to go to prison for a few years — but not to go to war, to kill people. Friends transferred money to me. I climbed over the fence — and went. Then I got on a plane and flew to St. Petersburg."
21/ Due to "the usual sloppiness" he was not detected and was able to take a minibus to Minsk. He flew from there to Tashkent in Uzbekistan. However, he was unable to stay for more than a couple of months due to the Uzbek government starting to send Russian fugitives back across the border. He fled again to Georgia, where he now works part-time at a construction site with Ukrainians who had fled from Russia. /end
Source:
https://storage.googleapis.com/qurium/nemoskva.net/2024-08-15-gotov-byl-sest-v-tyurmu-no-ne-ubivat-lyudej.html
21/ Due to "the usual sloppiness" he was not detected and was able to take a minibus to Minsk. He flew from there to Tashkent in Uzbekistan. However, he was unable to stay for more than a couple of months due to the Uzbek government starting to send Russian fugitives back across the border. He fled again to Georgia, where he now works part-time at a construction site with Ukrainians who had fled from Russia. /end