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Uzbekistan Warns Citizens Not to Join Foreign Armies Amid Russia-Ukraine War

Russia's parliament passed a law this week offering fast-track citizenship to foreigners who join its army.
Reuters
Sep 22 2022
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Russia's parliament passed a law this week offering fast-track citizenship to foreigners who join its army.
Service members of pro-Russian troops ride on armoured vehicles in the course of Ukraine-Russia conflict on a road leading to the city of Mariupol, Ukraine April 15, 2022. Photo: Reuters/Chingis Kondarov
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Tashkent: Uzbekistan's state prosecutors warned citizens against joining foreign armies after Russia offered fast-track citizenship to those who sign up and Ukraine said it had captured Uzbeks fighting alongside Russians.

Those fighting in military conflicts abroad faced criminal prosecution under Uzbek law, the Central Asian nation's Prosecutor General's office said in a statement late on September 21.

A video circulated in Ukrainian social media this month showed two Uzbeks captured in fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces; the detainees said they had been recruited in Moscow.

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Hundreds of thousands of Uzbeks live in or regularly travel to Russia to find work and provide for their families at home; some work illegally and risk being deported.

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Russia's parliament passed a law this week offering fast-track citizenship to foreigners who join its army, part of a broader drive to strengthen the military amid the stalled Ukrainian campaign which also included partial mobilisation.

With a predominantly young population of 35 million, Uzbekistan is the most populous ex-Soviet nation after Russia and Ukraine, and many Uzbeks are fluent in Russian.

(Reuters)

This article went live on September twenty-second, two thousand twenty two, at thirty-five minutes past eleven in the morning.

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