Soldier selfie raises questions for Russia

Instagram geolocation data showed that a number of selfies by a Russian soldier were taken in Ukraine.

Rebel separatists in Ukraine

Instagram geolocation data showed numerous selfies taken by a Russian soldier were taken in Ukraine. (AAP)

Photos taken by a Russian soldier have sparked controversy after it was revealed they may have been taken in Ukraine, despite Moscow's denials that its troops have intervened in the conflict across the border.

Alexander Sotkin, a 24-year-old Russian soldier and regular user of the photo-sharing app Instagram, recently uploaded a series of selfies of himself in uniform.

While the content of the photographs gives little away, the app's geolocation data showed that a number of the pictures were taken in Ukraine.

Images shared on Instagram can be "geotagged" - which means the location of where the picture was taken is published along with the photograph.

A series of earlier images show Sotkin's location to be the village of Voloshino in southern Russia, where his unit appears to be based.

But two pictures posted on July 5 and 6 are geotagged 10 kilometres away, across the border in Ukraine.

First reported by the US news site BuzzFeed, the two selfies could represent proof the Russian army has crossed the border into Ukraine despite denials by the Kremlin.

While it is possible to falsify the geolocation of photos posted online, it requires a particularly advanced knowledge of coding, a computer expert told AFP.

The Russian Defence Ministry has refused to comment on the reports.

BuzzFeed said other Russian soldiers have published photographs of their activities on the Russian social network Vkontakte without geolocation data but with captions suggesting that Russia has fired artillery into Ukraine, as Kiev and Washington allege.

"We pounded Ukraine all night," wrote solder Vadim Grigoriyev on July 23 under a photo showing two artillery pieces in a wheat field with open shell boxes nearby.

Grigoriyev then appeared on a state TV channel where he denied posting them.

"They were photos taken a long time ago. Most likely my Vkontakte page was hacked," Grigoriyev said on Rossiya24.

"Grads toward Ukraine," wrote another soldier, Mikhail Chugunov, alongside two photos of a rocket launcher on Vkontakte.

UN officials have called for a halt of using the unguided missiles near populated areas.


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