Test mailing of subpoenas will begin already during the spring conscription in 2023, said Moscow's military commissar Maxim Loktev, quoted by RBC.
According to Loktev, the military registration and enlistment offices will send alerts through the State Services and SMS.
At the same time, even before the adoption of the law, on April 11, Andrey Kartapolov, chairman of the State Duma Committee on Defense, stated that the amendments on electronic agendas would not apply to the spring draft. So he answered the corresponding question of Interfax.
On April 14, Russian President Vladimir Putin passed a law on the creation of a unified register of military records, which also provides for the sending of electronic subpoenas. Before that, the law was approved by the Federation Council, only Lyudmila Narusova voted against, noting that everyone understands what this law is aimed at. Andrei Kartapolov, head of the State Duma Committee on Defense, who on the air of Rossiya 1 bluntly stated that the law was needed for a "system of mobilization deployment." Communist Party deputy Nina Ostanina admitted that she would not be able to answer voters' questions about the content of each amendment, because the bill was adopted in a hurry. It follows from the law that even if a citizen did not receive a summons in his hands and did not see it in his personal account at the State Services, it will still be considered handed over seven days after being placed in the Unified Register, also from the date of receipt of the summons and until the citizen appears in the military registration and enlistment office it is forbidden to leave Russia.
- The Military Ombudsman project has launched a hotline on Telegram regarding new rules for serving subpoenas.