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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 05 November 2024

Russia invasion: Occupiers conscript Ukrainians

All men ages 18 to 35 have been forbidden to leave and ordered to report for military duty, according to witnesses and officials

Marc Santora, Anna Lukinova Kyiv Published 26.09.22, 01:01 AM
In two regions, Russian occupiers are beginning to round up men to fight even as they are forcing residents to vote in a 'sham referendum'

In two regions, Russian occupiers are beginning to round up men to fight even as they are forcing residents to vote in a 'sham referendum' File Photo

As military officers across Russia race to enlist hundreds of thousands of men to fight in Ukraine, the Kremlin is also looking to bolster its flagging recruitment efforts by dragooning Ukrainians in occupied territories to fight against their own nation.

In two regions, Kherson and Zaporizka, the Russian occupiers are beginning to round up men to fight even as they are also forcing residents to vote in a “sham referendum on joining Russia”. All men ages 18 to 35 have been forbidden to leave and ordered to report for military duty, according to witnesses and Ukrainian officials.

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Since President Vladimir V. Putin declared a “partial mobilisation” last week that is sweeping up hundreds of thousands of Russians, Moscow’s forces in Ukraine “don’t let men out”, said Halyna Odnorih, a coordinator in the city of Zaporizhzhia for people who have escaped occupied regions. “Many people are calling us and asking whether we could help them to evacuate. But unfortunately we can’t.”

The drive to compel Ukrainians to fight against other Ukrainians is part of a broader effort by Moscow to mobilise hundreds of thousands of new fighters as its forces suffer huge casualties and struggle to hold off Ukrainian advances in the east and south.

It also shows how the Kremlin is defying international condemnation and pushing forward with efforts to cleave Ukraine. Voting in staged referendums continued on Sunday in four occupied regions amid a backdrop of violence and repression, a likely prelude to an announcement of annexation by Moscow that Ukrainian officials warned could come as soon as next week. After that, analysts warn, the Kremlin could declare the areas Russian territory and protected by the might of its full arsenal, including the world’s largest stockpile of nuclear weapons.

Forced conscription also continues in the two other occupied regions where Russian officials are staging referendums, Luhansk and Donetsk, eastern areas that have been partially controlled by Moscow since 2014. In both, many men volunteered to fight for Russia before its full-scale invasion began in February. But as casualties rose — and many fighters were dispatched to the front with little training or support — a large-scale conscription effort has been instituted to replenish the ranks.

(New York Times News Service)

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