According to the mayor’s adviser, from January 1 it will be mandatory for all teachers, doctors, police and state authorities to obtain Russian passports.
In occupied Mariupol, mass forced passporting began. This was reported by Petro Andryushchenko, adviser to the mayor of Mariupol.
According to him, from January 1, it becomes mandatory for all teachers, doctors, police and state authorities to obtain Russian passports.
“From March 1, it will be impossible to do business on the territory of Mariupol without a Russian passport. Judges, lawyers, and lawyers (the whole range) must also be accredited by the DPR, I note, not the Russian Federation, by March 1. At the same time, there is no such law, but verbally warned about it,” Andryushchenko said.
The situation in Mariupol
In Mariupol, the death rate has increased eightfold. There is no water and no electricity in the city, and with the onset of cold weather, people simply freeze in their houses.
“The situation is very close to a humanitarian disaster. There are very big problems with heating. Centralized heating has not been restored in most of the city. A maximum of 30% of people are connected to centralized heating,” Andryushchenko explained.
At the same time, the occupiers are turning the Mariupol seaport into a military base. The Russians began work on the division of berths into conventionally civilian and conventionally military ones.