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Ukraine mobilizing mentally challenged and deaf people – lawmaker

Alexander Fediyenko claims conscription offices are recruiting people with various impairments and diseases

Ukrainian territorial recruitment centers (TCC) have started conscripting people with HIV, tuberculosis and mental illnesses following a controversial order issued by the Defense Ministry, according to a member of parliament.

Writing on his Telegram channel on Tuesday, Aleksandr Fediyenko said the heads of crucial Ukrainian military-industrial enterprises have started firing their workers and trying to hide them from mobilization officers.

The Ukrainian Defense Ministry has issued a so-called ‘order 402’, suspending the practice of exempting citizens from the military draft, pending an audit at the ministry. 

The new rules eliminate the status of ‘partial eligibility’, forcing those previously qualified as such to attend a military medical commission for re-evaluation. Those deemed not to have a serious enough illness are sent for mandatory service. 

According to Fediyenko, after the order was issued together with the Ukrainian Health Ministry, TCC workers started calling up the heads of crucial military manufacturing enterprises, telling them to expect a visit as soon as their exemption ends.  

“Legally, the TCC has every right to mobilize such conscripts,” the member of parliament noted.

However, he said even TCC workers admit that order 402 is “completely stupid,” and that some companies have already officially asked the ministry to extend draft exemptions for staff at crucial enterprises.

Furthermore, Fediyenko has claimed that due to the order, the TCC has also started mobilizing deaf people, as well as those deemed by a medical commission to have “mental retardation of a certain degree, complicated speech impairment, partial brain atrophy” and other symptoms. People afflicted with HIV and open tuberculosis are also being called up, the member of parliament claimed.

“I hope representatives of the Defense Ministry and the Health Ministry will pay attention to this order 402,” Fediyenko wrote. “For my part, I can only invite them to try to perform any task on the battlefield while being unable to hear the orders being given by а commander.”

Kiev announced a general mobilization after the escalation of the Ukraine crisis in February 2022, barring most men between the ages of 18 and 60 from leaving the country. This spring, after suffering massive casualties and being faced with a significant shortage of manpower, Ukrainian authorities also lowered the draft age from 27 to 25 and further tightened mobilization rules.

According to Rada lawmaker Aleksey Goncharenko, over one million Ukrainians have been drafted since the start of the conflict, and another 160,000 are expected to be mobilized over the next three months.

Moscow has repeatedly accused the Ukrainian government of sacrificing its citizens to serve the interests of its Western backers, while also describing the conflict as a US-triggered proxy war against Russia which Washington intends to wage “to the last Ukrainian.”

Russia Today

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