Advisor to the President's Office, Oleksiy Arestovych, said that Russia is losing up to 600 occupiers through liquidated and wounded.

However, the losses among the mobilized are still not enough for the citizens of the occupying state to feel it. 

He said this on October 24 in a conversation with Russian human rights defender Mark Feigin. 

Arestovych explained that there are losses among the mobilized, but they are not yet large enough to provoke a surge in Russia. 

"It will take another month or two for it to start hitting the brains," Arestovych said. 

The councilor of the OP emphasized that it is now difficult to calculate how many of the liquidated occupiers are mobilized. 

"How many among them are mobilized is difficult to calculate. In total, we demobilize 500-600 people at the front. But not all of them have been eliminated, among them there are wounded. It turns out that Russia loses one battalion-tactical group per day. The ratio of losses Ukraine and Russia 1 to 6," Arestovych said. 

Mobilization in Russia 

At the end of September, Russian dictator Putin announced a "partial" mobilization in the Russian Federation.

According to official data, up to 300 people were planned to be drafted into the occupation army, but Russian mass media believe that there may be a million mobilized. 

Those mobilized at the front began to appear two weeks later.

And they immediately began to be captured by the Ukrainian military. 

The Guardian emphasizes that just a few days after the announcement of mobilization, the Russian occupiers have already started returning home in coffins.

One of those mobilized from Chelyabinsk managed to stay at the front for 5 days, where he was liquidated.

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