A fighter from the Volgograd region was killed in combat.
Alexey Rogulkin from the Frolovsky district was killed in combat in Ukraine. Since the beginning of the military operation, at least 1,619 soldiers from the Volgograd region have been officially recognized as killed in it.
As "Caucasian Knot" reported, by January 10, at least 1,618 soldiers from the Volgograd region were officially recognized as killed in the military operation in Ukraine.
Twenty-one-year-old Alexei Rogulkin from the Frolovsky District was killed in a military operation, according to the publication "Volgogradskaya Pravda.ru," which is co-founded by the Volgograd Region Administration and the Regional Committee for Territorial Entities, Internal, and Information Policy.
"Alexei was born on March 3, 2004. He served in the combat zone as a private in an assault trooper position," the publication states.
The last time a fighter from the Frolovsky District died was reported on December 22, 2025. At that time, authorities reported that 30-year-old Andrei Nechayev had been killed in the military operation.
Thus, at least 1,619 soldiers from the Volgograd region have been officially recognized as killed in the military operation.
The "Caucasian Knot" maintains a list of names of natives of the North Caucasus and Southern Federal Districts killed in the military operation. The list was compiled based on data officially announced by government officials and law enforcement agencies, according to the "Caucasian Knot" report "NVO Statistics: Losses Are Growing for the South of Russia".
After Putin announced "partial mobilization" in In September 2022, attempts were recorded in the Volgograd Region and other regions of southern Russia to mobilize people who, due to age or health, should not be sent to combat zones. The governor acknowledged that many of those mobilized did not meet the criteria established by Putin. However, the regional governor's statement did not affect the mobilization regime in Volgograd.
State awards, memorial plaques, and appearances on Channel One do not guarantee state support for the families of those killed, according to the "Caucasian Knot" article "Three Comrades Served: How the Authorities Are Depriving the Families of Killed Volunteers of Benefits," which describes the stories of soldiers from other regions.
Translated automatically via Google translate from https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/419833

