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Gunman attacks Russian military recruiter as thousands flee mobilization


A young man shot and wounded the chief recruitment officer at a military enlistment station in Russia’s Irkutsk region on Monday, local authorities said, as thousands of fighting-age men continued to flee the country to escape being summoned to duty in President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine.

The alleged shooter in the attack on the recruitment chief, at a military commissariat in Ust-Ilimsk, a small town in Irkutsk, apparently was distraught that his close friend had been called for duty despite having no prior military service.

Putin, announcing the partial mobilization, had said only experienced servicemen would be summoned. “We are talking about partial mobilization,” the president said in a national address. “In other words, only military reservists, primarily those who served in the armed forces and have specific military occupational specialties and corresponding experience, will be called up.”

But there has been a torrent of reports all across Russia, including from ardent supporters of the war, of people being summoned for duty despite having no prior military service, or being too old or otherwise physically incapable of going to war. Those reports, along with the government’s acknowledgment that thousands of fighting-age men have fled the country to avoid conscription, suggest that the chaotic mobilization is becoming the latest debacle in Putin’s war.

A video clip of Monday’s shooting showed the man, identified as 25-year-old Ruslan Zinin, firing at least one shot inside the office.

“The shooter was immediately arrested, and he will definitely be punished,” Irkutsk regional governor Igor Kobzev wrote in his Telegram blog. “I can’t wrap my head around what happened, and I am ashamed that this is happening at a time when, on the contrary, we should be united.”

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According to Kobzev, the recruiter, Alexander Eliseev, has been hospitalized in critical condition.

Zinin’s mother, Marina Zinina, told Russian outlet ASTRA that her son was distraught because his best friend got a mobilization summons despite never serving in the army.

“They said that there would be partial mobilization, but it turns out that they take everyone,” she was quoted as saying.

As local commissariats rushed to fulfill quotas, mobilization notices were sent to men who should be legally exempt from service because of their age, health or lack of military experience.

Some were sent home after a public uproar. Others, such as 59-year-old Viktor Dyachok, who has Stage 1 skin cancer and is blind in one eye, were called to duty, independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported.

Amid swirling confusion over who could be summoned, thousands of Russians continued to flee the country on Monday, fearing that the Kremlin would soon move to shut the borders for men running away. Meanwhile, resistance to the call-up for war duty has resulted in a spate of other violent incidents.

In Ryazan, a city in western Russia, a man reportedly set himself on fire at a bus station to protest the war in Ukraine. Local outlet YA62.ru reported that the man, whom the authorities did not immediately identify, “started laughing and shouting that he did not want to participate in the special operation in Ukraine,” using the Kremlin-preferred euphemism for the war.

A video posted by the outlet showed the man, who was not severely injured, being led outside the bus terminal by police and ambulance workers.

Sporadic protests have broken out, including in Russian regions populated mainly by ethnic minorities such as Dagestan, where the majority of residents are Muslim, or the indigenous lands of Buryatia and Yakutia. Local activists say these areas are being disproportionately affected by the mobilization.

More than 2,300 protesters have been detained across dozens of Russian cities since Putin announced the partial mobilization Wednesday morning, according to rights group OVD-Info, which monitors protest activity in the country.

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Traffic jams stretching for miles have formed at the border crossings with Georgia and Kazakhstan as the departure of Russians continued through the weekend and on Monday.

“The jam at the Russian-Georgian border continues to be about 20 kilometers long” — roughly 12.5 miles — “and the wait time to cross into Georgia is now up to three days,” Nikolai Levshitz, a Russian-speaking blogger who helps expatriates assimilate in Georgia, wrote in his daily Telegram update.

With air tickets to virtually all visa-free destinations long sold-out, Russians are crossing by foot, by car or even by bicycle in hopes of reducing the waiting time to leave. Photos and video clips posted on social media have shown piles of abandoned bicycles near the border posts.

One Russian man who arrived at Istanbul airport on Monday morning said he took a charter flight from Moscow…



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