Hawke's Bay Today

Tears for Russians called up to fight

Zelenskyy tells Russians they are being ‘thrown to their deaths’

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Russia escalated its military and political campaign yesterday to capture Ukrainian territory, rounding up Russian army reservists to fight, preparing votes on annexing occupied areas and launching new deadly attacks.

A day after President Vladimir Putin ordered a partial mobilisati­on to bolster his troops in Ukraine, dramatic scenes of tearful families bidding farewell to men departing from military mobilisati­on centres in Russia appeared on social media.

Video on Twitter from the eastern Siberian city of Neryungri showed men emerging from a stadium. Before boarding buses, the men hugged family members waiting outside, many crying and some covering their mouths with their hands in grief. A man held a child up to the window of one bus for a last look.

In Moscow, women hugged, cried and made the sign of the cross on men at another mobilisati­on point. A 25-year-old who gave only his first name, Dmitry, received a hug from his father, who told him “Be careful,” as they parted.

Dmitry told Russian media company Ostorozhno Novosti he did not expect to be called up and shipped out so quickly, especially since he still is a student.

“No one told me anything in the morning. They gave me the draft notice that I should come here at 3pm. We waited 1.5 hours, then the enlistment officer came and said that we are leaving now,” he said. “I was like, ‘Oh great!’ I went outside and started calling my parents, brother, all friends of mine to tell that they take me.”

Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyy, in some of his harshest comments so far in the nearly sevenmonth-old war, lashed out at Russians succumbing to the pressure to serve in their country’s armed forces and those who haven’t spoken out against the war. In his nightly video address, he switched from his usual Ukrainian language into Russian to directly tell Russian citizens they are being “thrown to their deaths”.

“You are already accomplice­s in all these crimes, murders and torture of Ukrainians,” Zelenskyy said, wearing a black T-shirt that said in English: “We Stand with Ukraine”, instead of his signature olive drab T-shirt. He said Russians’ options to survive are to “protest, fight back, run away or surrender to Ukrainian captivity”.

Western leaders derided Putin’s mobilisati­on order as an act of weakness and desperatio­n. More than 1300 Russians were arrested in antiwar demonstrat­ions on Thursday after he issued it, according to the independen­t Russian human rights group OVDInfo. Organisers said more protests were planned for tomorrow.

Putin’s partial call-up of 300,000 reservists was short on details, so much so that the Russian military announced yesterday it had set up a call centre to answer questions.

In Washington, Pat Ryder, the Pentagon’s press secretary, said the US believes that it will take Russia time to train and equip the new troops and that doing so may not solve command and control, logistics and morale issues.

Concerns about a potentiall­y wider draft sent some Russians scrambling to buy plane tickets to flee the country, and Zelenskyy claimed the Russian military is preparing to draft up to a million men. A Kremlin spokesman denied such claims.

In the Kremlin’s territory annexation campaign, pro-Moscow authoritie­s in four Russian-held regions of Ukraine plan voter referendum­s starting today on becoming part of Russia — a move that could expand the war and follows the Kremlin’s playbook from when it annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula after a similar referendum. Most of the world considers the 2014 annexation of Crimea to have been illegal.

Voting on the referendum­s in Ukraine’s Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzh­ia and Donetsk regions is scheduled to last through to Wednesday. Foreign leaders have called the votes illegitima­te and nonbinding.

In Luhansk, billboards reading “With Russia Forever” and “Our Choice-Russia” appeared on the streets, while volunteers distribute­d ribbons in the colours of the Russian national flag and posters reading, “Russia is the future. Participat­e in the referendum!”

On the battlefiel­d, Russian and Ukrainian forces exchanged missile and artillery barrages as both sides refused to concede ground.

Russian missile strikes in the southern city of Zaporizhzh­ia left one person dead and five wounded, Ukrainian officials said. Officials in the separatist-controlled city of Donetsk said Ukrainian shelling killed at least six people.

While the hostilitie­s continued, the two sides managed to agree on a major prisoner swap. Ukrainian officials announced the exchange of 215 Ukrainian and foreign fighters — 200 of them for a single person, an ally of Putin’s. Denis Pushilin, head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, confirmed that pro-Russian Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Medvedchuk, was part of the swap.

Putin has repeatedly spoken about Medvedchuk as a victim of political repression. Media reports alleged that Medvedchuk was a candidate for leading a puppet government the Kremlin hoped to install in Ukraine.

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