Mobilization protestors again clash with police in Dagestan

Rally against mobilization in Dagestan
Rally against mobilization in Dagestan

Protesters clashed with police on the square in the center of Makhachkala, the capital of the Republic of Dagestan, part of the Russian Federation, the “We Can Explain” Telegram channel reports.

Read also: Russian police detain hundreds of people at anti-mobilization protests

Eyewitnesses said police were beating protesters, while National Guard officers threatened journalists and demanded that video footage of their arrests be erased.

The police also used tear gas against the protesters. About 100 people came to the protest in Makhachkala, reports the Kavkaz.Realii Telegram channel.

In addition to Makhachkala, protests took place in Khasavyurt, in the west, close to the neighboring Republic of Chechnya, with about 100 people took to the streets against the mobilization there. The police began to arrest people, while the protesters resisted them, video from the opposition Telegram channel 1Adat shows.

Read also: About 1,000 summonses served in occupied Sevastopol amid ‘partial mobilization’ in Russia

People unhappy about the mobilization also gathered in Nalchik, the capital of Kabardino-Balkaria, a federal subject of Russia in the Caucuses region. They confronted local officials, who refused to tell them how many men from the republic are to be drafted.

Large-scale protests in Makhachkala against mobilization and the war with Ukraine began on Sept. 25. At the same time, residents of the village of Endirey in the Khasavyurt district of Dagestan blocked the Khasavyurt-Makhachkala federal highway. The police tried to disperse protesters by firing into the air.

Read also: Man sets himself on fire in Russia’s Ryazan to escape mobilization

Earlier, on Sept. 22, the federal highway in Dagestan’s Babayurtovsky District was also blocked in protest against the mobilization. On the same day, a video of a riot near a military registration and enlistment office in Dagestan appeared on social networks.

Kremlin dictator Vladimir Putin announced a "partial mobilization" in Russia on Sept. 21.

According to official data from the Russian Defense Ministry, the plan is to draft about 300,000 reservists. However, the part of the published decree ordering the mobilization dealing with the number of draftees is marked only “for official use.”

Read also: Military commissar shot in Russia during mobilization meeting – video

According to Russian opposition media, the secret paragraph of the plan details the mobilization of around one million Russians for the war in Ukraine. The Kremlin is also mainly mobilizing people from national minorities, which has led to accusations that Russia is using the war call-up to conduct ethnic cleansing.

Read the original article on The New Voice of Ukraine