After Russia issued a local mobilization order, public security incidents such as shootings and self-immolations broke out in the country one after another. The picture shows a group of conscripted Russian recruits on the 25th.

(Associated Press)

[Central News Agency] Russia escalated its military mobilization against Ukraine, causing dissatisfaction. Today, there were reports of shootings and attempted self-immolations, and large-scale protests even took place in the tightly controlled Inner Caucasus region.

The Kremlin admitted that "some errors" occurred during the mobilization process.

Many recruiting offices were attacked after Russian President Vladimir Putin escalated military operations against Ukraine, Reuters reported.

The military mobilization order also sparked the latest wave of exodus since Russia invaded Ukraine in February.

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●Siberian mobilization center blasts conscription officer in critical condition

One person was detained after a gunman opened fire at a recruitment center in Siberia's Irkutsk region.

A video uploaded on social media shows the man who shot telling police he was 25-year-old Ruslan Zinin.

He opened fire at the recruitment office in the town of Ust-Ilimsk in the Irkutsk region.

Another video shows him firing at least one shot at the recruiting office.

Irkutsk Governor Igor Kobzev said in a Telegram message that a military commissar was injured in the shooting and is in critical condition.

The gunman was arrested immediately and "will definitely be punished".

●Chanting "I don't want to fight in Ukraine", the man who tried to set himself on fire was taken away

According to media sources, in Ryazan, about 185 kilometers southeast of Moscow, a man who tried to set himself on fire at a bus stop was taken away in an ambulance after shouting "I don't want to fight in Ukraine".

●The authorities strictly control the rare large-scale opposition in the inner Caucasus

Both Dagestan and Yakutia, which are part of the Russian Federation, protested over the conscription over the weekend.

Both places have already devoted disproportionate troops to the Ukrainian war.

At least 101 people were detained yesterday in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, the rights group OVD-Info said.

Kremlin: "Some mistakes" occurred during mobilization

The Kremlin today acknowledged that "some mistakes" had occurred in the mobilization of reservists for the Ukrainian military operation, stressing that it had not decided to close the border.

"In fact, there have been cases of violations of the mobilization order," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, AFP reported. "Some governors are actively correcting the situation and we hope that all mistakes will be corrected. ”

He told reporters that there was "no decision" to close the Russian border, amid rumors that the authorities planned to prevent men eligible for conscription from leaving the country.

●Do not want to be cannon fodder mobilization order triggers the influx of cars into Georgia visa-free Georgia

Thousands of Russian men have fled the country in droves after Russia's military mobilization order, many of them service-age men flocking to the Caucasian nation of Georgia.

The report pointed out that the border between Russia and Joe is 20 kilometers long.

Nikita, 23, told AFP on the Georgia side of the Kazbegi border crossing: "I had no choice but to flee Russia. Why on earth did I have to be involved in this crazy War? I don't want to be cannon fodder, I don't want to be a murderer."

Denis, 38, said: "Our president wants us all involved in this cannibalistic war, and his declaration of war is totally illegal. I want to run away. For me, I'm not coming to Georgia for vacation. , but to immigrate.”

According to Georgia statistics for June, nearly 50,000 Russians fled to Georgia during the first four months of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

During the same period, some 40,000 people fled to Armenia, another country that allows Russians to enter without a visa.

● Hate the invasion of former Russian officers who risked their escape to Finland

Alex, a former Russian military officer, was born in Crimea and held a Ukrainian passport.

After Putin issued a partial mobilization order and fled to Finland with a suitcase, he revealed that he was disgusted by the war and believed that Putin would eventually lose.

"I couldn't help feeling disgusted in front of Russian citizens who supported the war," he told AFP on condition of anonymity, worried about his wife and children still in Russia.

●Finland: 17,000 cross-border Russians exploded over the weekend

After Moscow announced its military mobilization order, Finland said today that nearly 17,000 Russians crossed the border into Finland over the weekend, an increase of 80 percent from a week earlier.

Traffic at the border was slightly calmer this morning, but still busier than in the past few weeks, and "the traffic queue is still longer than usual since the outbreak," Taneli Repo, head of Finland's southeastern frontier, told Reuters.

●Ukrainians in the referendum zone to join Russia feared to be drafted into the Russian army

Ukraine's pro-Russian local chiefs held a referendum on joining Russia in four states from the 23rd to the 27th. Among them, Ukrainians in the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol in Zaporizhzhia are now worried that because some residents are at gunpoint. Forced to vote in a referendum under threat of mouth, they may be called up by Moscow's mobilization.

"Our inhabitants are frightened and terrified, not knowing what will happen tomorrow, when they will be drafted into the Russian army," Melitopol mayor-in-exile Ivan Fedorov said in a video conference. ”

Fedorov said that the Russian army arrested people on the street and forced the people to vote, "not only for themselves, but also for the whole family." Everyone in the building votes".

The only checkpoint in the Kyiv-controlled area from the local area, Vasylivka, was not allowed to pass through for 4 days for men aged 18 to 35, and it was completely closed yesterday.

● Help Russia attack Ukrainian dual citizens Moldova considers offering sanctions

Moldova's pro-Western President Maia Sandu said today that Moldovan citizens who also hold Russian passports could have their Moldovan citizenship revoked if they were called up by Moscow to fight in Ukraine.

In Moldova, the Moscow-backed separatist Transnistria region has 200,000 people with dual Moroccan and Russian citizenship.

● mobilization order wrongly ill elderly Russian authorities promise to correct mistakes

When Putin issued a partial mobilization order on the 21st, he said that the call-up was limited to those with "relevant" skills or military experience, but the call-up order was mistakenly issued to students, the elderly or the sick, causing public grievances. The authorities on the 25th Commitment to fix bugs.