Zelenskyy calls on Ukrainians to undermine referendum in Russian-held areas
Kyiv and the West slam vote as a rigged election
A Kremlin-orchestrated referendum got underway Friday in occupied regions of Ukraine that sought to make them part of Russia, with some officials carrying ballots to apartment blocks accompanied by gun-toting police.
Kyiv and the West condemned it as a rigged election whose result was preordained by Moscow. The Group of Seven industrialized nations said Friday they "strongly condemned" the vote.
The referendums in the Luhansk, Kherson and partly Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions were widely seen as a prelude to Moscow annexing the regions. The voting overseen by authorities installed by Russia, scheduled to run through Tuesday, is almost certain to go the Kremlin's way.
Authorities in the Kherson region said residents of a small Moscow-controlled area of the neighbouring Mykolaiv province also will be able to vote, and that small area was "incorporated" into Kherson until all of Mykolaiv is taken over by Russian forces.
Ukraine and the West said the vote was an illegitimate attempt by Moscow to slice away a large part of the country, stretching from the Russian border to the Crimean Peninsula.
A similar referendum took place in Crimea in 2014 before Moscow annexed it, a move that most of the world considered illegal.
Election officials were carrying ballots to people's homes and setting up makeshift polling stations near apartments in the referendum, taking place over four days, with officials citing safety reasons.
Russian state TV showed one such election team accompanied by a masked police officer carrying an assault rifle.
Ivan Fedorov, the Ukrainian mayor of Melitopol in the Zaporizhzhia region, told The Associated Press that Russians and residents of Crimea were brought into his city to urge people to vote.
"The Russians see an overwhelming reluctance and fear to attend the referendum and are forced to bring people... to create an image and an illusion of the vote," he said. "Groups of collaborators and Russians along with armed soldiers are doing a door-to-door poll, but few people open the doors to them."
Polls also opened in Russia, where refugees from the occupied regions can cast their votes.
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Denis Pushilin, the Moscow-backed separatist leader in the Donetsk region, called the referendum "a historical milestone."
Lawmaker Vyacheslav Volodin, the speaker of Russia's State Duma, said in an online statement to the regions: "If you decide to become part of the Russian Federation, we will support you."
Thousands attended pro-Kremlin rallies across Russia in support of the referendums, news agencies reported. "Long live the one, great, united Russian people!" one speaker told the large crowd at a central Moscow rally and concert titled, "We Don't Abandon Our Own."
Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai accused Russian officials of taking down the names of people who voted against joining Russia. In online posts, Haidai also alleged that Russian officials threatened to kick down the doors of anyone who didn't want to vote.
Yevgeny Popov, journalist and representative in Russia's Duma, rejected characterizations that the process would be rigged.
"Of course they are going to vote freely," he told CBC News.
"People in Donbas live under the artillery shelling, and the repressions, and the threats from Ukrainian government for the last eight years. And I'm sure that they already decided what they want, and I know what they want," said Popov.
'Interfere with any Russian operations'
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Ukrainians in occupied regions to undermine the referendums and to share information about the people conducting "this farce." He also urged Ukrainians to avoid being called up in the Russian mobilization announced Wednesday.
"But if you do end up in the Russian army, then sabotage any enemy activity, interfere with any Russian operations, give us all important information about the occupiers. ... And at the first opportunity, switch to our positions," he said in his nightly address.
Putin's partial mobilization of reservists could add about 300,000 troops, his defence minister said. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov dismissed as false media reports of plans to muster up to 1.2 million troops.
Across Russia, men hugged their weeping family members before departing as part of the call-up, which has raised fears that a wider draft might follow. Antiwar activists planned more protests Saturday.
Other Russian men tried desperately to leave the country, buying up scarce plane tickets and creating traffic jams hours or even days long at some borders. The lines of cars were so long at the border with Kazakhstan that some people abandoned their vehicles and walked — just as some Ukrainians did after Russia invaded their country Feb. 24.
Russian authorities sought to calm public fears over the call-up. Lawmakers introduced a bill Friday to suspend or reduce loan payments for those called to duty, and the media emphasized that they would be paid the same as professional soldiers and that their civilian jobs would be held for them.
The Defence Ministry said many of those working in high tech, communications or finance will be exempt, the Tass news agency reported.
Amid the mobilization and referendums, the horrors of the conflict persisted.
Kharkiv regional Gov. Oleh Synyehubov and the region's police chief, Volodymyr Tymoshko, said at least 30 of the 436 bodies exhumed so far in Izium bore signs of torture. Among them were the bodies of 21 Ukrainian soldiers, some found with their hands bound behind their backs, they said.
Russian forces occupied Izium for six months before being pushed out of the area by a Ukrainian counteroffensive earlier this month.
The exhumations, which began a week ago, are nearing an end, as investigators work on identifying victims and the cause of death. A mobile DNA lab was parked at the edge of the burial site.
Experts commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council also presented evidence Friday of potential war crimes, including beatings, electric shocks and forced nudity in Russian detention facilities, and expressed grave concerns about killings the team was working to document in Kharkiv and the regions of Kyiv, Chernihiv and Sumy.
With world opinion pushing Moscow deeper into isolation over the war, Russia lashed out against the West. Its U.S. ambassador, Anataly Antonov, said at a Moscow conference Friday about the 1962 Cuban missile crisis that Washington is trying to bring Russia "to its knees" and divide it into "several fiefdoms" while stripping it of its nuclear weapons and its permanent seat at the UN Security Council.
In new reports of fighting, Ukraine's presidential office said 10 civilians were killed and 39 others were wounded by Russian shelling in nine Ukrainian regions.
Battles continued in the southern Kherson during the vote, it said, while Ukrainian forces meted out 280 attacks on Russian command posts, munitions depots and weapons.
Heavy fighting also continued in the Donetsk area, where Russian attacks targeted Toretsk, Sloviansk and several smaller towns. Russian shelling in Nikopol and Marhanets on the western bank of the Dnieper River killed two people and wounded nine in Marhanets.
In other developments, Kyiv expelled Iran's ambassador and reduced staff at the Iranian Embassy in response to Tehran's "supply of weapons to Russia for war on Ukrainian territory," said Oleh Nikolenko, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry.
Ukraine reported shooting down an Iranian-made Mohajer-6 drone that can be used for surveillance or to carry precision-guided weapons, adding that it destroyed four other Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones.
Earlier Friday, Ukrainian officials said Russia had attacked the port city of Odesa with Iranian-made drones, killing one person.
With files from CBC's Briar Stewart and Reuters