According to documents on the Russian government’s website, nine barracks for 3,500 soldiers are being built near the village of Soloti

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

Russia has started building a huge military base housing ammunition depots and barracks for several thousand soldiers near the Ukrainian border, a project that suggests the Kremlin is digging in for a prolonged standoff with Kiev.

The base, when completed, will have its own swimming pool, skating rink and barber shop, according to public documents. This week workers were erecting a fence in a cornfield outside the village of Soloti to mark the perimeter, and told a Reuters reporter to leave, accusing him of being a Ukrainian spy.

In almost the same spot there was a flurry of military activity in April last year that coincided with intense fighting across the Ukrainian frontier about 15 miles away. A squadron of Mi-24 attack helicopters was seen there at the time, as well as army tents and trucks.

Nato has accused Russia of using makeshift bases for sending soldiers and hardware into Ukraine to support pro-Russia separatists.

Russia denies its military is in Ukraine. The defence ministry did not reply to written questions from Reuters about the purpose of the new base and whether there was any connection to the Ukraine conflict.

According to tender documents published on the Russian government’s website zakupki.gov.ru, the ministry is building the base on a 300-hectare site near Valuyki, a small town not far from Soloti.

The ministry intends to build nine barracks for 3,500 soldiers, warehouses for rockets, artillery weapons, and other munitions with a total area of over 6,000 sq m.

The documents also said there would be a large training complex and an infirmary for 50 beds, which can be expanded in case of “a massive influx of wounded”.

They did not give the exact location of the base, but residents in Soloti said they believed it would be on their doorstep. “They are building a military town,” said Alexander Panchenko, whose house overlooks farmland where preparatory work is underway for a big construction project.

A Reuters reporter saw workers at the site on Monday installing a metal fence and paving the road to the construction site. There were several construction trailers, an excavator and heaps of rubble behind the fence.

A man in Soloti, who called himself a representative of the Federal Agency for Special Construction – which overseas construction of defence installations – refused to talk about the work, saying only that “a secret facility” was being built.

A builder at the site accused the reporter of being a Ukrainian spy, while his superior stopped the reporter’s car, photographed his documents and said he would call the Federal Security Service, Russia’s main counter-intelligence agency.

The field where the work was underway is near a railway line that links Soloti with Moscow and Luhansk, the adjacent Ukrainian region controlled by pro-Moscow separatists.

Russia has pulled out of the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe, a post-cold war pact that limits the deployment of troops in Europe, so it is free to move extra troops and hardware to its western border.

According to the procurement documents, the defence ministry plans to use the base to train soldiers in artillery use and army air defence, as well as in driving tanks and armoured personnel carriers.

The plan includes a site for studying the tactics of the US army, which was called a “likely enemy” in the document.

On top of that, the base will include a headquarters with a communications node, a dining room for 2,000 soldiers, a recreation centre with skating rink, sports complexes with a swimming pool, tennis and badminton courts, and a residential complex of more than 1,000 flats.

The document requires the completion of the first stage – the base design and initial construction and installation works – by 29 April 2016.

Fighting between Ukrainian government forces and the separatists in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions has killed almost 8,000 people since it flared up in April 2014.

The violence has almost subsided since 1 September when the Ukrainian parliament backed giving more autonomy to rebel-held areas, in line with a peace deal.

However, the truce is under threat because the sides have not fully agreed on the withdrawal of weapons from the conflict area, and the separatists are preparing local elections without coordination with Kiev.

