Saturday, September 24, 2022

Russians Voting ... With Their Feet

 




As the sham referendum takes place in Russian-occupied Ukraine, a more legitimate and telling vote is taking place in war criminal Putin's Russia:

Military-aged men fled Russia in droves Friday, filling planes and causing traffic jams at border crossings to avoid being rounded up to fight in Ukraine following the Kremlin’s partial military mobilization.

Queues stretching for 10 kilometers (6 miles) formed on a road leading to the southern border with Georgia, according to Yandex Maps, a Russian online map service.

The lines of cars were so long at the border with Kazakhstan that some people abandoned their vehicles and proceeded on foot — just as some Ukrainians did after Russia invaded their country on Feb. 24.

Meanwhile, dozens of flights out of Russia — with tickets sold at sky-high prices — carried men to international destinations such as Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Serbia, where Russians don’t need visas.

The exodus is not without its critics in Europe:

Some European officials view fleeing Russians as potential security risks. They hope that by not opening their borders, it will increase pressure against Putin at home.

Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics said Thursday that many of those fleeing “were fine with killing Ukrainians. They did not protest then. It is not right to consider them as conscientious objectors.”

What's also of note is that the place of these comparatively well- off, mostly ethnic Russian men will be taken up by conscripts from central Asia, who'll be Putin's cannon fodder:

In an early sign of how seriously Moscow is ramping up its efforts, the Human Rights Council of Russia has proposed that immigrants from central Asian countries who have had Russian citizenship for less than 10 years will undergo compulsory military service in Russia for a year.
 
"We are preparing proposals for new citizens of the Russian Federation who have Russian citizenship for less than 10 years to do compulsory military service for a year for people from Central Asian countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan," council member Kirill Kabanov wrote on Telegram Thursday.
In other words, people not in a position to "vote with their feet."  But, wherever people are being asked to die for Putin's war in Ukraine, turmoil is bound to follow.

(Photos:  cars lining up to enter Finland / Sasu Makinen, Lehtikuva via AP;  Russians jamming airport/ screenshot via @ianbremmer)