Ukraine extends martial law, general mobilisation for 90 more days
Published on Apr 17, 2025
By IANS
- KYIV — The Ukrainian Parliament has voted to extend the country's current
martial law and general military mobilisation for another 90 days, parliament
member Yaroslav Zheleznyak said on social media Telegram.
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- According to Zheleznyak, 357 lawmakers supported the
extension of martial law, while 346 backed the mobilisation -- well above the
226 votes required for approval, Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday.
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- The new extension will be from May 9 to August 6,
reported the Interfax-Ukraine news agency.
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- Ukraine first imposed martial law and declared nationwide
mobilisation following the outbreak of the ongoing war with Russia in February
2022, and has repeatedly extended both measures.
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- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky submitted
respective Bills to the Parliament.
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- Martial law was declared in Ukraine on February 24, 2022,
and repeatedly extended.
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- Kyiv officials said on numerous occasions that martial
law made presidential and parliamentary elections in Ukraine impossible.
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- The presidential term of Zelensky expired in May 2024,
which makes him illegitimate in the eyes of Russian officials.
- Read: 21 killed in Russian ballistic missile attack on Ukraine's Sumy
- Under Ukraine's Constitution, elections cannot be held
during martial law -- a provision that remains in effect despite external
calls, including from Russia and the US, for a timeline on a future vote.
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- Russia's President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly
questioned the legitimacy of his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelensky,
whose five-year term was originally due to end in May last year, and even
raised the prospect of a temporary United Nations-backed government to lead
Ukraine to elections.
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- Reacting to the martial law extension, Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov accused Kyiv of trying to "preserve its unstable structure".
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- In February, US President Donald Trump described Zelensky
as a "dictator without elections", prompting Ukrainians to rally
around their leader and boosting his approval ratings.
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- US President Donald Trump has called for holding a
presidential election in Ukraine.
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- As peace talks led by the Trump administration created
hopes for a potential ceasefire and eventual elections, some Ukrainian
Opposition politicians have grown more vocal in their criticism of Zelensky.
Still, there is broad support for maintaining martial law.
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- Petro Poroshenko, a former President and leader of the
country's largest opposition party, said there was no doubt martial law should
be prolonged, but accused Zelensky of attempting to use the measure to shore up
his powers.
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- "I want to stress that we should recognise the
obvious – the government has started to abuse martial law, using it not only to
defend the country, but to build an authoritarian regime," Poroshenko said
during parliamentary debates on Tuesday.