The fighting in the Carpathians brought severe hardship to the local civilian population. Following the reconquest of
Bukovina, the Austro-Hungarian military authorities imposed strict martial law. The entire population was subject to re-registration, movement was restricted through a system of military passes, and special food requisitions were introduced. Reprisals were carried out against those suspected of having collaborated with the Russians. The Russian military authorities similarly subjected the local population to organized repression, which from January 1915 took on an explicitly ethnic character. On February 4, 1915, the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Grand Duke
Nikolai Nikolayevich, issued the following order regarding the Jewish population of Bukovina: The hostages were transported under guard to
Kyiv province. Acting on this instruction, Ivanov further ordered that Jews be deported to a distance of no less than two hundred miles from army headquarters. These orders generated considerable confusion and correspondence between army headquarters and the South-Western Front. On March 5, 1915, the Chief of Staff of the General Headquarters
Nikolai Yanushkevich issued a clarifying directive: In practice, expulsion "towards the enemy" proved unworkable under the conditions of positional warfare. The Jewish population of
Galicia and
Bukovina was instead deported into the Russian interior. On March 27, Yanushkevich telegraphed the front headquarters to clarify policy: The Minister of Internal Affairs designated the provinces of
Poltava and
Chernigov — outside the theater of war — for the internment of hostages. On April 7, 1915, the chief supply officer of the South-Western Front armies, General of Infantry
Alexei Alekseevich Mavrin, confirmed the strict implementation of these measures. On April 21, the chief of staff of the 8th Army Corps, Major General
Georgy Viranovsky, reported to 8th Army headquarters that the order had been carried out. Ethnic discrimination extended into the ranks of the Russian army itself. On February 12, 1915, Yanushkevich declared soldiers of
German colonial descent to be "unreliable" and ordered their transfer to the
Caucasian Front, exempting only militiamen and non-combatants. Any soldiers who attempted to desert were to be fired upon without restraint. On the matter, he is quoted as saying "in general, no cruelty will be excessive." In the 11th Army, then besieging
Przemyśl, Commander Infantry General
Andrey Selivanov ordered the disarmament of approximately 400 soldiers of German descent, who were placed under
Cossack escort and assigned to earthworks duties in the 58th and 81st Infantry Divisions. Any failure of "honest service" was to be met with the full penalties of military law. On March 4, the Chief of Staff of the 11th Army, Major General
Vladimir Sigismundovich Weil, ordered corps commanders to submit weekly reports detailing the work assigned to these soldiers, their conduct, and any influence they might be exerting on other troops. Until the end of the siege of the fortress at Przemyśl, not a single case of evasion or subversion was recorded among soldiers of German descent. Divisional commanders, the commander of the siege artillery, and the commander of the army telegraph company all commended their performance, and in several cases their weapons were returned to them. ==Outcome==