In the Khabarovsk Territory, after the issuance of subpoenas to those who do not meet the «selection criteria», military commissar Yuri Loiko was removed from his post. The head of the region, Mikhail Degtyarev, published a recording of his appeal on his Telegram channel.
“In 10 days, several thousand of our countrymen received summons and arrived at the military registration and enlistment offices, and we returned about half of them home, as they did not meet the selection criteria for entering the military service under the contract. <…> Further, the military commissar of the Khabarovsk Territory, Yuri Sergeevich Loiko, has been removed from his post today,” Degtyarev said. -context-cite__image» alt=»1″ />«Complete crap.» How mobilized Russians are being prepared for the war in Ukraine — the story of a private from Kaliningrad
The head of the Khabarovsk Territory cited as an example the story of a local resident Vitaly Dorenko, who is raising a daughter with a disability. He clarified: “Today, a man is already at home, where he is needed no less than on the front line. I emphasize once again that partial mobilization applies only to categories that are approved by the Ministry of Defense and the President.
Since the beginning of the «partial» mobilization, it has become known about cases when people without combat experience and even without military service experience, those who have dependent relatives with serious illnesses, fell under the draft. Mediazona told in detail the story of 40-year-old Yevgeny Railyan, a father of many children, one of whose sons is disabled with heart disease. The man was sent to the location of the 2nd Taman motorized rifle division, mobilized from there already reported that they were going to be sent without preparation near Kherson.
In addition, workers from Russian enterprises began to be sent to the army. They were handed out summonses right at work, regardless of what diseases and what kind of military experience a person has. “They allegedly took the men for a medical examination, forbidding them to go to the point by personal transport. They put everyone on the bus. They didn’t return to replace them,” said a friend of an employee of the Liebherr plant in Nizhny Novgorod. context-cite__image» alt=»1″ />Chronicles of “partial mobilization”. In Moscow, a 40-year-old father of three children is sent to the front, one of whom is disabled