
Ukrainian recruitment officer killed in suspected car bombing
Investigators suspect the blast was intentional and may have been triggered remotely. Odessa regional police confirmed one fatality and said an investigation is under way, but did not name the person who was killed when a vehicle exploded in a village in Berezovsky District.
Law enforcement sources cited by local media said that the vehicle belonged to a local draft office. The Southern Courier named the victim as Colonel Oleg Nomerovsky, a top official at a regional military recruitment center.
The incident comes as Ukraine faces mounting scrutiny over its conscription practices, with the conflict with Russia now in its third year and Kiev struggling to replenish its forces.
Ukraine has been under general mobilization since 2022, barring most men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country. The minimum conscription age was lowered from 27 to 25 in 2024, and penalties for evading service were tightened.
Ukrainian MP Yury Kamelchuk said conscription officers are under orders to bring in 12 new recruits per day and are using aggressive tactics to meet quotas, including luring food couriers with fake delivery requests. He blasted the government's approach as disrespectful and claimed even men with health issues are being targeted.
Videos have repeatedly surfaced online showing Ukrainian officials using force to detain men in public areas, in what has become known locally as 'busification,' a term referring to forcibly loading recruits into unmarked vans.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Ukrainian recruitment officers were grabbing people 'like dogs on the street,' contrasting it with Russia's volunteer-based enlistment. 'They are catching 30 thousand people [per month] there now, and we have 50-60 thousand a month enlisting willingly,' he said earlier this week.
One such video from Lutsk in western Ukraine showed soldiers dragging a food delivery worker into a white van as he resisted. The clip went viral after being shared on X. Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, reacted to the video with '!!' and has previously criticized Ukraine's conscription policy, writing in November: 'How many more need to die?'
Ukraine's Defense Ministry has repeatedly dismissed criticism of the mobilization process as 'Russian propaganda,' but Deputy Defense Minister Lt. Gen. Ivan Gavrilyuk acknowledged the issue last month, calling 'busification' a 'shameful phenomenon.'
In response to falling voluntary enlistment, Kiev recently launched a campaign targeting men aged 18–24, offering a one-time payout of one million hryvnia ($24,000) for a year of service.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
2 hours ago
- Russia Today
‘No defense against' Russia's Oreshnik missile – ex-Pentagon analyst
Neither Ukraine nor its Western backers have any means to counter Russia's newly deployed intermediate-range Oreshnik missile, Michael Maloof, a former senior Pentagon security analyst, told RT in an interview on Friday. Maloof noted that the Oreshnik could 'easily shift the balance of power overwhelmingly in favor' of Russia in any conflict, including the ongoing hostilities with Ukraine. 'Having a hypersonic [missile] for which there's no defense currently… is astonishing. It absolutely alters that balance of power dramatically, for which the Ukrainians have no defense,' he said. He noted that while the US is working to adapt missile defense systems such as THAAD to counter hypersonic threats, these programs remain under development. 'There's no operational ability at this point to deal with a hypersonic missile,' Maloof said, adding that the Oreshnik could reach its targets within mere minutes. The former analyst added that the missile also travels at a speed of over 7,000 miles (11,000km) an hour. 'There's no defense against that,' he said. The missile system, Maloof stated, has already been tested successfully in Ukraine in battlefield conditions. He was referring to a strike on Ukraine's Yuzhmash military industrial facility in the city of Dnepr in November 2024. Russian President Vladimir Putin said afterward that the missile's warheads flew at speeds exceeding Mach 10 and could not be intercepted by existing air defenses. The missile could also carry conventional and nuclear payloads and travel up to several thousand kilometers. According to Putin, the Oreshnik strike on Ukraine was a response to the country's decision to use Western-supplied long-range missiles for attacks deep into Russia. On Friday, the Russian president said that the first serially produced Oreshnik missile system had entered service with the armed forces. He also noted that the question of supplying the weapons to Belarus, Russia's key ally, will likely be resolved by the end of the year.


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
After Ukraine, is this country the West's next project?
The current Moldovan government has embraced a pro-NATO course and openly casts Moscow as the country's primary national security threat. At the same time, it is working to sever all remaining ties with Russia and fully align itself with the Western bloc. Moscow, for its part, has repeatedly warned – as it did with Ukraine – that NATO's eastward expansion crosses a red line. Parliamentary elections are scheduled for late September, and the pro-Western PAS party, led by President Maia Sandu, will do everything in its power to retain control of the government. If they succeed, Moldova is likely to see further militarization and escalating tensions with Russia – potentially leading to open conflict. Even more alarming is the possibility that Sandu might attempt to 'reintegrate' Transnistria – a breakaway region with a population of around 220,000, the majority of whom hold Russian passports. Roughly 10,000 Russian troops are stationed in the region, which borders Ukraine's Odessa oblast, making it a flashpoint not only for Chisinau and Moscow, but also for Kiev. Ukrainian journalist Dmitry Gordon, a close associate of Vladimir Zelensky, recently spoke openly about resolving the 'Transnistria issue' by military means. Any military move by Moldova against Transnistria would, in effect, trigger a direct confrontation with Russia. In that case, Greek ports like Alexandroupolis and Thessaloniki are expected to become key NATO logistics hubs – much like they are today in support of Ukraine. According to credible reports, NATO already has contingency plans in place to turn Greece into the primary weapons transit point for Moldova in Southeastern and Eastern Europe. This deepening involvement could also make Greek infrastructure a target. Moscow has previously issued veiled but pointed threats to Athens over its role in supplying Ukraine. A similar scenario could unfold again. Such developments would undoubtedly intensify the NATO-Russia standoff. So far, despite Ukraine receiving a significant portion of Western military aid via Greek territory, Moscow has refrained from direct strikes on Greek soil. But that restraint may not last forever. Over time, Greece has become a strategic NATO hub for operations on the alliance's eastern flank and within Ukraine. The port of Alexandroupolis, in particular, plays a pivotal role thanks to its position on the Balkans and its overland connections to Bulgaria, Romania, and Central and Northern Europe. Since early 2022, it has served as a vital artery for the flow of US and NATO equipment to Ukraine. Any new confrontation layered on top of the ongoing war in Ukraine dramatically increases the risk of destabilizing the entire European continent. A second front would likely bring a new wave of hybrid threats – cyberattacks, sabotage, strikes on critical energy and transport infrastructure – and fuel yet another migration crisis, especially in Southern Europe, which is already struggling with refugee flows. Most crucially, a war in Transnistria could reignite other frozen conflicts across the Balkans – in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, North Macedonia, and even Cyprus. Some analysts believe Türkiye might seize the opportunity to push its revisionist agenda, particularly in Cyprus. The West has had its eye on Moldova for some time. Since 2022, the EU has been supporting Chisinau through the European Peace Facility. EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas recently announced a €60 million military aid package that includes short-range air defense systems, radar equipment, armored vehicles, drones, personal protective gear, and communications systems. According to Moldova's 2034 defense strategy, the country plans to deepen NATO cooperation and raise defense spending to 1% of GDP by 2030. In the past two years, Chisinau has adopted a series of national security and defense policies based on the assumption that Russia poses the greatest threat. President Sandu, a vocal supporter of Ukraine and close ally of Zelensky, has adopted an overtly anti-Russian stance. From 2023 to 2024, Moldova doubled its defense budget and launched a sweeping modernization of its armed forces. Western media report that EU countries have delivered eight air defense batteries, German armored vehicles, French artillery systems, and large quantities of ammunition. Joint exercises with NATO militaries have also surged – all signs of accelerated militarization. Last year, reports emerged that the US, France, and Germany had provided Moldova with $1.5 billion worth of weapons and supplies, including Piranha armored personnel carriers, tactical vehicles, light and heavy weaponry, sniper systems, ammunition, and Polish-made Piorun MANPADS (portable air defense systems). Military aid is expected to increase by another 50% in 2025. NATO is also preparing to ramp up its use of the Greek defense industry – particularly Hellenic Defense Systems, which is effectively controlled by the Czech holding company CSG, a major supplier to the Ukrainian text was originally published by the Greek media outlet and has been translated and edited by the RT team.


Russia Today
6 hours ago
- Russia Today
Ukraine must say ‘yes' to gay marriage — EU state
Ukraine should extend full legal protections to gay people, including same-sex marriage, as part of its bid for EU membership, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has said. Ukraine was granted EU candidate status in 2022 shortly after the escalation of the conflict with Russia. While Brussels has floated 2030 as a possible accession date, all current member states must approve the move. 'There's a living expression of the libertarian values that Ukraine is fighting for,' Kristersson wrote in a post on Friday, after meeting with LGBTQ Ukrainian veterans and Sweden's rights group RFSL in Stockholm. He noted that same-sex couples in Ukraine 'cannot enter into marriage or a registered partnership' and said Sweden would 'closely monitor' the matter during the EU accession process. The message comes as Ukraine faces growing pressure from Brussels to adopt EU standards, including legal protections for LGBT citizens. Critics, however, say both countries have yet to guarantee full equality. In Sweden, transgender healthcare access remains limited, and activists say more progress is needed on legal gender recognition. In July, a Ukrainian court reportedly recognized a same-sex couple as a legal family for the first time. Two men married in the US were granted permission to live abroad after a Kiev court ruled that they met the definition of a family, despite lacking legal or blood ties. Ukraine's government has repeatedly pledged to improve LGBTQ rights. In 2015, then-President Pyotr Poroshenko proposed legalizing civil partnerships. In 2022, under pressure from activists and EU officials, Vladimir Zelensky ordered legislation to be drafted on same-sex unions. However, no law has passed due to opposition from conservative and religious groups. Russia banned 'LGBT propaganda' in 2022 and labelled LGBT an extremist organization in 2024. Moscow opposes Ukraine joining NATO but initially stayed neutral on EU membership. In March, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Kiev had the 'sovereign right' to join if the EU remained economic in nature.