200,000 have been conscripted since Sept. 21 order; close to 400,000 Russians went to nearby states.
Far more Russians have fled abroad than have enlisted in the military since President Vladimir Putin announced a mobilization to bolster his faltering invasion of Ukraine.
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said more than 200,000 people have been conscripted into the army since Putin’s Sept. 21 order for a partial call-up, Russian news services reported Tuesday.
That matches an exodus of more than 200,000 Russians to neighboring Kazakhstan alone over the same period reported Tuesday by the central Asian country’s interior minister. Almost 69,000 Russians crossed into Georgia by Sept. 30, according to Interior Ministry data in the Caucasus republic, where vast lines of vehicles built up at the land border with Russia following the mobilization announcement.
The European Union said last week that 66,000 Russians had entered the bloc in the week to Sept. 25. Most came through Finland, which reported Tuesday that nearly 30,000 more Russians crossed its land border from Sept. 26 to Oct. 3. Finnish authorities, which introduced heavy restrictions on Russian tourist arrivals on Friday in response to the surge in entrants, said just over 18,000 returned to Russia over the same period.