Thousands of Ukrainians have managed to dodge
conscription thanks to various schemes in a corrupt system, the
newspaper reports
Thousands
of Ukrainian men have paid large sums in bribes to avoid getting
drafted during the ongoing conflict between Kiev and Moscow, the
Financial Times reported on Saturday.
The news comes as Ukrainian
President Vladimir Zelensky launched a massive military purge, sacking
all of the regional military conscription officials and citing the
multiple corruption scandals rocking the country. The recruitment
officials are set to be replaced by combat veterans, according to Kiev’s
plan.
Over the course of the ongoing conflict, thousands of
Ukrainians have managed to escape the draft through various schemes in a
culture of corruption. Kiev banned men aged between 18 and 60 from
leaving the country when it first introduced martial law in February
2022, but the move only fueled more corrupt practices. One of the most
popular options was simply buying medical exemption papers for some
$6,000 on average, the FT reported, citing the findings of a probe into
corruption by Ukrainian authorities.
Thousands of Ukrainian men
have also attempted to leave the country illegally, with some 13,600
caught near border crossings and another 6,100 apprehended at
checkpoints with fake papers, the FT noted, citing the latest official
figures.
The head of the Odessa regional recruitment center Evgeny Borisov,
who was arrested last month, turned out to be one of the most ‘prolific’
officials involved in draft-dodging rackets. The official is now
suspected of bagging more than $5 million in bribes, charging from
$2,000 to $10,000 per person for various ‘options’ to escape the draft.
Borisov is believed to have been using the ill-gotten money to fund a
posh lifestyle, with his family procuring a €4.2-million ($4.6-mn) villa
in Spain last December, as well as other luxury assets, according to
Ukrainian investigators.
Apart from the ongoing corruption
scandals, the Ukrainian draft effort has also been marred by the violent
actions of conscription officials. Numerous disturbing videos
highlighting certain Ukrainian draft techniques emerged online in recent
months, as Kiev struggled to compensate for its reported heavy
battlefield losses.
Multiple videos show conscription officers
chasing random men in the streets to give them a draft notice, violently
detaining and even beating up the would-be soldiers. Many of these
conscripts were reportedly killed on the frontline just days after
getting ‘drafted’ in such a fashion.