Moscow and St. Petersburg have the most detainees — 536 and 478, respectively.

There are 48 detainees in Yekaterinburg, 30 in Perm. "OVD-Info" clarifies that at least one criminal case is known in Yekaterinburg.

In other cities of Russia, the actions were mostly few.

At the same time, the police acted harshly: they used violence against peaceful protesters, in St. Petersburg people were beaten with batons, the publication notes.

Russian Telegram channels report that immediately in several Moscow police departments those detained at the protest action against the mobilization were served with summonses to the Military Commissariat.

Telegram channel "That's right" writes that the detainees were forced to sign subpoenas at the "Sakalinaya Gora" police station.

The military commissar was there, the wife of one of the detainees said;

he was also forced to sign a subpoena.

Later, she told "Mediazone" that her husband was released from the police station.

"The commissar personally presented [the gift] to him.

On the video, they filmed how they handed him a summons and said that he cannot but accept it, because he is a citizen of the Russian Federation and is obliged to appear at the commissariat tomorrow," she clarified.

Kiril Goncharov, a member of the Yabloko party, published a photo of one of the subpoenas.

According to him, it was made at the police department of the Mazhai district.

"Summons were handed to the detainees at the Sakalnaya Hora and Lublin police stations.

A man in civilian clothes came to the police station in the Marfina district and said that he would now serve summonses.

According to the information of the detainees, officers of the military commissariat came to the police station in the area of ​​Vernadzky prospect," the report says.