Last month, police roundups euphemistically called “migration raids” took place in several Russian regions, with police and military conscription officials targeting food markets and agricultural warehouses, both places where migrant labourers are typically employed. Anyone found to have recently obtained Russian citizenship but who hadn’t registered with the local conscription office was reportedly either issued with draft notices on the spot or taken to the military authorities directly.
The Russian media has reported on various such round-ups in recent weeks, including one at a St. Petersburg vegetable warehouse in mid-August in which around 100 recently naturalised Russian citizens were detained. In late August, police in the city of Nizhny Novgorod rounded up around 20 “new Russians” and took them to the local military recruitment centre. Similar roundups have also been reported in four other regions of the country.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, one lawyer told Novaya-Europe that these tactics aimed at forcing immigrants to join Russia’s war effort dated back as far as February.