In Melitopol, the Russians refuse to treat people without Russian passports.
According to journalists, local residents cannot receive proper medical care even from ambulance workers, because all the drugs go to the treatment of soldiers of the Russian army.
The Russians continue to force people to obtain passports in the temporarily captured Melitopol. From June 1, the Russians will prohibit the issuance of free medicines to those who have not received a passport of the Russian Federation and an insurance number of an individual personal account.
“This time, the Russians invented a real test for such “stubborn” people – from June 1, they will prohibit the issuance of free medicines to those who have not obtained a Russian passport and an insurance number of an individual personal account,” the source says.
Local residents, whose health depends on the availability of medicines, are forced to go for a Russian passport.
The message also states that there is an acute shortage of all medical drugs: “The ambulance service arrives on calls without any medications at all – it gets to the point that there is not even elementary paracetamol in the suitcase of doctors. The reason for such a shortage of drugs is banal. All the humanitarians who come to Melitopol and allegedly intended for ordinary people, goes to treat Russian soldiers. Ivan Fedorov reported on the panicked mood of the Russian army back on April 28. Then one of the collaborators was eliminated in the city.
On April 28, the chairman of Melitopol said that the Russians began to take away boats from local fishermen. The official joked that the Russians had decided to “sail away” from the counteroffensive of the Armed Forces.