The mother of a teenager killed by a tank at an exhibition was forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement.
Aitalina Alekseeva, the mother of 16-year-old Anton, who died at a military equipment exhibition in Yakutsk, said in a video message that she and her lawyer were forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement regarding the case.
"I don't understand how my words could hinder the investigation. I was given a vague written agreement that didn't specify what information I shouldn't disclose. It seems they're simply asking me to keep quiet about everything," says the mother of the deceased boy.
According to Alekseyeva, the prime suspect in the case was an engineer at the museum where the exhibition was held. Aitalina believes that all culprits must be found: those directly involved in the equipment, the museum director, and those responsible for the "demilitarization." She also wants an honest, objective, and open investigation, not just a "ticket-ticking" exercise.
"It was the publicity that helped get this case off the ground when I started speaking out. And now they're simply shutting me up, but I have the right to speak out about what concerns me, what's happening to me, and how I'm pushing for an investigation," says Aitalina.
Anton Alekseev perished at an exhibition of captured equipment on January 20, 2026. The tank's interior structures collapsed on him. Before that, in April 2025, a child died in Komsomolsk-on-Amur—his killed with a lid from an armored personnel carrier.
Equipment exhibitions are being transported from city to city. The idea is that this will allow citizens to see military equipment from the Ukrainian and NATO Armed Forces. The exhibits are accompanied by short stories about the vehicles captured at the front.
Video: Yakutia.Info

