Russia’s lower house backs digital draft notices, legal consequences for evading mobilisation. Main highlights

- The bill text was published today, a few hours before the lower house of parliament adopted it in all three readings;
- The lawmakers approved the amendments after “listening to a TV interview” and after studying the text for two hours, head of the lower house’s committee for issues of family and women Nina Ostanina said;
- The bill will enter into force after it is approved by the upper house and signed by the president. The Federation Council, upper house of parliament, will consider the bill tomorrow;
- According to the bill, notices will be sent electronically, to citizens' accounts on Gosuslugi, a public services portal. If the draftee does not have a Gosuslugi account or they haven't received the notice via traditional means, it is deemed received seven days after it is uploaded to the national “draft notice registry”;
- Russians will be automatically banned from leaving country immediately after they receive a digital summons;
- If Russians refuse to show up at a designated military draft office within 20 days, they will face additional restrictions (on receiving loans, driving, and others);
- The bill’s footnote explains that it is adopted to clamp down on “draft evaders”.
The Russian State Duma, lower house of parliament, has officially adopted amendments to the military conscription law that will equate electronic draft summons to the printed ones and ban people targeted by summons from leaving the country. The amendments were published just a few hours before the vote.
The most important development is the ban on foreign travel if a potential draftee refuses to show up at a designated draft office after receiving the summons to do so. To streamline the procedure and avoid chasing eligible men down, Russia will introduce electronic draft notices, which will legally hold the same value as their printed analogues. Notices will be sent electronically, and it will be up to citizens to check their personal accounts on Gosuslugi, a public services portal. The summons is automatically considered received after it is sent out. Potential draftees will then have twenty days to report back to the specified enlistment office.
If they fail to do so, they will face legal consequences, such as the aforementioned foreign travel ban as well as loss of the right to work as a self-employed individual, obtain bank loans, register properties or vehicles, or drive cars. Moreover, the amendments envision creation of a special summons register where all draft summons will be uploaded automatically. In case a potential conscript cannot be found in person and does not have a public services portal account, he will still be considered notified seven days after the notice is uploaded to the register.
The bill targets planned conscription and other types of military draft according to senior lawmaker Andrey Kartapolov. “We are talking about all those eligible for military service, so [the new rules will be applied] to all citizens in reserve,” he said as quoted by TASS.
The Russian police under the new rules will be able to search for those evading military service and detain them. Public services, such as courts, universities, tax offices, as well as employers, will be required to submit information about citizens to draft offices.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied that Moscow was considering a new wave of mobilisation. “There’s no second wave,” he said, adding that the Kremlin “was not and is not discussing it”. He also told reporters that Russians will not panic or flee the country over the new bill because it is not linked to mobilisation.
Meanwhile, head of the lower house’s committee for issues of family and women Nina Ostanina said that the digital summons amendments were adopted after “listening to a TV interview” and two hours of studying the text, RBC reports.
“The history of the State Duma knows cases when amendments were passed after being delivered orally to the house. However, I cannot recall when a whole bill was passed after we listened to a TV interview and looked at the bill text for two hours while being in the hall. <…> When our voters ask us about the content of each article of the bill, I will not be able to respond as indistinctly as Andrey Kartapolov,” she said.



