In Ukraine, adjustments were made to the mobilization law, taking into account the criticism of the commander-in-chief of the country’s Armed Forces, Valery Zaluzhny. This was stated by Verkhovna Rada deputy Maryana Bezuglaya, one of the authors of the mobilization bill, on her page on the social network Facebook (the owner of the Meta company is known as an extremist in Russia and is banned).
According to the information provided, the project will provide parents with three or more children, people with 1st and 2nd group disabilities, and guardians of a person with 1st and 2nd disability, the right to deferment and exemption from military service. groups, pregnant women and women on maternity leave, as well as citizens who lost loved ones during the 2014 “counter-terrorist operation” and Russia’s special military operation (SVO) in Ukraine.
In addition, consecutive higher education applicants under the age of 30, those with academic titles, teachers and full-time employees are promised a postponement without exemption grounds. The bill exempts from mobilization former prisoners of war, generals who served for three years during martial law, and citizens aged 18 to 24 who signed a short contract with the Ministry of Defense during the mobilization period.
According to the document, in Ukraine, compulsory military service for all applicants aged 18 to 25 in all educational institutions is proposed to be replaced by up to three months of combined arms training.
On the eve of Bezuglaya reportedHe said that the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Valery Zaluzhny, generally supports the mobilization bill.
Previously the majority of Ukrainians spoke Against Zaluzhny’s resignation.