39-year-old resident of Vladivostok Sergei Fedoseenko died after being detained due to a protest at the recruiting office of the military registration and enlistment office. Astra writes about it.
According to the channel, Fedoseenko came to the recruiting station on September 27 and expressed dissatisfaction. How the man did this, and what exactly he said, is not specified. The leadership of the military registration and enlistment office called the police, Lieutenant Gennady Tadykov and Ensign Igor Kryuchkov arrived at the scene. The man was handcuffed and put into the official car.
Arriving at Police Station No. 3, the law enforcement officers opened the car, “they saw that he was ill and called an ambulance.” The doctors pronounced him dead. No details about how Fedoseenko was taken were given.
In Russia, after Vladimir Putin announced a “partial” mobilization, they again began to set fire to military enlistment offices and administrative buildings. In addition, on September 26, 25-year-old Ruslan Zinin shot Alexander Eliseev, head of the Ust-Ilim military enlistment office, at his workplace, he is in a hospital in serious condition. The shooter went inside the building and, before firing from the sawn-off shotgun, said: "No one will fight." He was detained. According to Baza, before the shots, Zinin said another phrase: “Now we will all go home.” TASS was told in court that he was taken into custody until November 26. On the same day, September 26, another man in Russia attempted to set himself on fire. He did this at the central bus station in Ryazan, while declaring that he did not want to fight in Ukraine. Police and an ambulance arrived at the scene, but the man was not injured.
In July, The Insider talked to representatives of underground groups that set fire to military enlistment offices in Russia, and also take responsibility for the increasing derailment of trains. Some of them spoke about how the underground resistance is organized and why decentralization makes it especially effective.