Some Russians rush for the border after mobilisation order
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[September 22, 2022]
By Jake Cordell and Essi Lehto
TBILISI/HELSINKI (Reuters) -Some Russian
men rushed for the exits on Thursday after President Vladimir Putin
ordered a partial mobilisation, with traffic at border crossings with
Finland and Georgia surging and prices for air tickets from Moscow
rocketing.
Putin on Wednesday ordered Russia's first mobilisation since World War
Two and backed a plan to annex swathes of Ukraine, warning the West he
was not bluffing when he said he'd be ready to use nuclear weapons to
defend Russia.
Prices for air tickets out of Moscow soared above $5,000 for one-way
tickets to the nearest foreign locations, with most air tickets sold out
completely for coming days.
Social media groups popped up with advice on how to get out of Russia
while one news site in Russian gave a list of "where to run away right
now from Russia." There were long tailbacks at border crossings with
Georgia.
"War is horrible," Sergei, a Russian man who declined to give his
surname, told Reuters as he arrived in Belgrade, the Serbian capital.
"It's okay to be afraid of war and of death and such things."
One Russian man who gave his name only as Alex told Reuters in Istanbul
that he had left Russia partly due to the mobilisation.
"The partial mobilisation is one of the reasons why I am here," he said.
"A very poor step it seems to be, and it can lead to lots of problems to
lots of Russians."
He said he felt that not many Russians would want to be sent to fight.
Another Russian, who gave his name only as Vasiliy, arrived in Istanbul
with his wife, teenage daughter and six suitcases.
"The mobilization was inevitable because there was a shortage of human
resources. I am not worried because I’m already 59 years old and my son
lives abroad," he said.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday that reports of an
exodus of draft-age men were exaggerated. Asked about reports that men
detained at anti-war protests were being given draft papers, Peskov said
it was not against the law.
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A man smokes while walking past a mural,
which was painted on a multi-storey building in support of the
Russian army, in Moscow, Russia September 21, 2022. REUTERS/Evgenia
Novozhenina
Russian state-owned pollsters say that more than 70% of Russians
support what the Kremlin calls the "special military operation",
though polling leaked in July showed an even split between those who
wanted to fighting to stop or continue.
The war in Ukraine has killed tens of thousands, unleashed an
inflationary wave through the global economy and triggered the worst
confrontation with the West since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis,
when many feared nuclear war imminent.
$5,000 TICKETS
A tourism industry source told Reuters that there was desperation as
people sought to find air tickets out of Russia.
"This is panic demand from people who are afraid they won't be able
to leave the country later - people are buying tickets not caring
where they fly to," the source said.
Traffic arriving at Finland's eastern border with Russia
"intensified" overnight, the Finnish Border Guard said.
"The number clearly has picked up," the Finnish border guard's head
of international affairs, Matti Pitkaniitty, told Reuters, adding
that the situation was under control and border guards were ready at
nine checkpoints.
Russian police detained more than 1,300 people in Russia on
Wednesday at protests denouncing mobilisation, a rights group said.
In the far eastern region of Yakutia, a military commissar ordered a
call for mobilisation.
(Additional reporting by Mehmet Emin Caliskan, Bulent Usta, David
Gauthier-Villars in Istanbul, Writing by Caleb Davis and Guy
Faulconbridge, editing by Mark Heinrich, Frank Jack Daniel, William
Maclean)
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