Electronic summonses began to be sent out in Moscow
19:10, March 22, 2024
Source:
Conscientious Objector Movement
The Moscow Military Commissariat has begun sending electronic summonses to local residents through the mos.ru portal,
reports the human rights movement “Movement of Conscious Objectors” . As the telegram channel
“Caution, News” writes , messages about sent subpoenas come to “Government Services” and in the form of SMS.
Muscovites who have received a summons are invited to the “Unified Conscription Point” to clarify military registration documents. In the summons, a screenshot of which was published by a human rights organization, a Moscow resident is invited to come to the military registration and enlistment office on April 8.
The “conscientious objector movement” suggests that the summonses are being sent en masse, “because the Moscow authorities are massively digitizing the personal files of conscripts and are trying to update the data due to the personal appearance of conscripts.”
“We do not recommend visiting Moscow institutions related to military conscription unless absolutely necessary,” the organization said.
The head of the Duma Defense Committee, Andrei Kartapolov, said earlier this week that during the spring conscription, as in the fall of 2023, summonses will be sent out in test mode. “The main agenda is paper, until the register of those liable for military service is operational,” he told RIA Novosti.
A “single recruitment point”
opened in Moscow on Yablochkova Street, 5 building 5 in early March.
Spring conscription into the Russian army begins on April 1.
In April 2023, the State Duma
adopted a law creating a unified register of those liable for military service. Among the data that will be collected in the registry are information about the health status and education, place of residence and work of conscripts. Russian President Vladimir Putin
ordered the autumn conscription of 2024 to be carried out through the register of those liable for military service.
As part of the military reform, deputies legalized electronic summonses and also prohibited “citizens subject to conscription for military service” from leaving Russia from the moment they receive the summons until they appear at the military registration and enlistment office.
Sources of “Verstka”
claim that the Russian Ministry of Defense is going to send another 300 thousand people to the war, and therefore a new mobilization is possible.