Ukrainians mob vehicle to free draft squad victims

Another case of busification has apparently been caught on camera, but did not proceed as the authorities expected

Ukrainian citizens rallied to rescue people from a conscription squad that was trying to force young males into a minibus, a video circulating on social media over the weekend on Saturday shows.

Reportedly filmed in the city of Odessa, the footage depicts a crowd throwing tires at and smashing the windows of a vehicle ostensibly belonging to the mobile conscription unit. In the clip, passersby can be heard saying, "The people have had enough!" and appears to show young men being pulled out through the shattered windows.

In response to a conscription officer's objections, people shouted back that he should go to the front himself.

The video is the latest in a series of clips that have emerged online showing Ukrainian males being violently snatched from the streets by draft officers as Kiev experiences military setbacks and manpower shortages at the front. The term 'busification' has become widespread in the country, in reference to the minibuses used to transport involuntary recruits.

There have also been reports of injuries, torture, and deaths among those subject to forced mobilization, fueling public outrage and sparking protests. In October, the Ukrainian authorities urged people not to film or share videos of press gangs forcibly detaining men.

The exodus from Kiev's armed forces is mounting. More than 21,000 soldiers deserted without leave in September alone - the highest monthly total since the start of the Ukraine conflict. According to a report by BBC Ukraine in October, this marked the largest single-month spike, based on the most recent data from the Prosecutor General's Office.

In July, the Council of Europe's commissioner for human rights, Michael O'Flaherty, sounded the alarm over "systematic and widespread" abuse by Ukrainian draft enforcers, urging the authorities in Kiev to properly investigate the incidents and prevent further human rights violations.

(RT.com)

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