They are not sobbing and seem to believe that these are only military exercises: the relatives of Russian reservists called to support the Russian offensive in Ukraine came to say goodbye to their sons, fathers or fiancés in Saint Petersburg on Tuesday.
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These people, gathered in front of a military police station in this former imperial Russian capital, talk to each other in a low voice, sometimes approaching the fence separating the police station from the street, to exchange a few words with the reservists, who are already from the ‘other side.
“These are just military exercises, aren’t they?” asks a woman in her sixties to her neighbour.
“I believe, yes, the military exercises, I don’t know, nobody knows, but they stay here in the back,” replies confidently Svetlana Antonova, 55, whose 27-year-old son showed up at the police station on Tuesday after receiving the summons last Saturday.
Nikita, a 25-year-old reservist, and Alina, his 22-year-old fiancée, stand hand in hand through the fence, he all moved, she with tears in her eyes.
“I don’t know what to say, I’m in shock,” Alina admits, without taking her eyes off her beloved.
“I was not surprised after receiving the summons, my relatives rather yes, but not me. Well, if you have to go, then you have to,” says this young man who did his military service a few years ago.
For Galina, 65, and her family, the mobilization of her son-in-law is “another twist of fate”: her daughter is undergoing treatment for cancer, and their child is only 12 years old.
“He works in construction. In the army, he was a shooter at the time,” says Galina, holding her grandson Micha by the hand.
“How are we going to live now, if it’s for a long time, I don’t know,” she sighs.
“It is said that they will be sent to the military training base near Zelenogorsk”, in the vicinity of Saint-Petersburg”, continues Galina.
“Did we think about escaping mobilization? Not at all. We have nowhere to go,” she adds.
Since the announcement of a “partial” military mobilization of reservists in Russia on September 21, tens of thousands of Russian men of fighting age have fled abroad, especially to the former Soviet republics of Central Asia. and the Caucasus.