The Google-cached version shows a picture of the soldier and a story of how he died.

A link to the story on the site of the Amur GTRK (State Television and Radio Committee) is now showing a 404 error page .

“He was brought from Moscow on an IL-76. He was met with all the military honors, with a guard of likely about 80 people. Well, and then at 2:00 pm he was brought to his father’s home. There was everything: both the honor guard, standing near the coffin, and the music, and the requiem was sung. I have only one complaint against the army — I don’t have my son.”

Shirokopoyas, a contract soldier with the rank of junior sergeant, was sent into combat in April and within a month sustained a deadly wound when he stepped on a mine. His father, Gennady Shirokopoyas, told Amu (translation by The Interpreter ):

The soldier killed is said to have been artillerist Mikhail Shirokopoyas, age 35, from the village of Seryshevo, who reportedly served in the 35th Army and was wounded in Syria.

That story can also be found in Google cache, and said that Shirokopoyas was deputy commander of his platoon and was buried on June 11. He leaves behind a wife and 13-year-old daughter.

His wife told Amur.info that her husband had left in April on a mission for three months. Within the first month, in May, he was injured in a mine explosion. Syrian doctors operated on him and then he was brought to Moscow for further treatment, but was unable to be saved and died on June 7. She said that in telephone calls with her husband, he said he could not reveal his location in Syria, but that he expected to take a vacation in August.

Amur.info said that the 35th Army told them to go to the Defense Ministry with inquiries, but there, the Russian military did not confirm the death.

In 2015, President Vladimir Putin decreed that the deaths of military abroad could not be reported in the interests of national security, and the Russian Constitutional Court later upheld the decree.