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Moscow Draft Offices To Close From Monday: Mayor

According to reports, a man in Moscow was apprehended on Monday evening after trying to throw a Molotov cocktail at the Lenin
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Army draft offices will close in Moscow from Monday as the Kremlin’s quotas for recruiting reservists to fight in Ukraine have been met in the capital, city mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced.

“Assembly points for mobilised people will close on October 17, 2022, at 2:00 pm, 1100 GMT,” Sobyanin said on his website.

He said “the task of partial mobilisation” — announced just over a month ago — had been “completed in full” in the city.

Sobyanin said remaining army summons sent out in Moscow were no longer valid. He did not say how many Muscovites had been called up.

The mayor’s announcement came three days after President Vladimir Putin promised to complete his mobilisation drive “within two weeks”.

The Russian leader said 222,000 people out of a target of 300,000 had already been mobilised.

Announced on September 21, Putin’s call-up drive has led to an exodus of Russians.

Moscow, which traditionally produces far fewer soldiers than Russia’s poorer and remote regions, is the first to end the unpopular mobilisation.

Sobyanin said the drive had been a “huge test for thousands of Moscow families” and thanked Muscovites for their “sense of duty and patriotism”.

He wished mobilised Muscovites well on the battlefield and said he hoped they would return to the capital alive.

“We are all worried about your fate, the difficulties and dangers that lie ahead of you and those that you are already facing,” he said.

“We hope and pray that you return alive and healthy (and) that you return with a victory having defended the security and independence of our country.”

Sobyanin promised the authorities would “take care” of the families of people called up.

He also vowed to “improve life in military units”, after reports of dire conditions in Russian army training camps led to discontent.

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AFP

Agence France-Presse (AFP) is a French international news agency headquartered in Paris, France. Founded in 1835 as Havas, it is the world's oldest news agency.







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