Employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are fired en masse due to corruption, poor pay and forced work as punitive bodies in occupied Ukraine.
Russia lacks policemen. The question of personnel became too acute after the start of the war. This was announced on Thursday, August 31, in the ISW report.
“The Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs is experiencing an acute shortage of personnel after a full-scale invasion of Ukraine,” experts say.
The report recalls that on August 31, a decree came into force in the Russian Federation that actually abolishes age restrictions for service in the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Made, according to representatives of the Institute, it was to reduce the shortage of personnel.
“The document increases the age limit for those wishing to join the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation from 35-40 to 50-55 years, depending on the position,” they note.
Also, the new document abolishes the requirement to obtain personal bail when entering the service, cancels probationary periods for new employees with military experience, as well as
allows individuals deemed unfit for service on health grounds to continue to serve in an altered capacity.
Also, employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation are massively dismissed from work due to corruption, poor pay and forced labor as punitive bodies in the occupied part of Ukraine.
It should be noted that in August 2023, the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Kolokoltsev, said that in Russia there were not enough police officers “ritically, and warned that this could affect the level of crime.
In Russia’s Leningrad Region, Strategy-18 activist Vladimir Shipitsyn is accused of using violence against a law enforcement officer after a man accidentally knocked off a policeman’s cap with a flagpole of Ukraine during his arrest.
Earlier in Moscow, the police detained a man who had been walking his dog for a long time on the Patriarch’s Ponds.
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