Wives, girlfriends and children of mobilized soldiers have called for an end to the war (Photo: East2West News)

The wives and girlfriends of the mobilized Russian soldiers called on President Vladimir Putin to go to the front and ‘die’.

Protests and calls for an end to the massacre in Ukraine have increased across Russia as young men continue to die en masse.

In a message on the Telegram channel The Way Home, a group calling for the return of mobilized men, they told the dictator: “Vladimir Putin, where have you taken the people?” We Russians have no hope under your leadership.

“Finish your work and sit at the negotiating table.”

The women’s protest channel condemned Putin’s reasons for organizing a war that is estimated to have killed and maimed more than 300,000 Russians, and showed clear signs of women’s resistance to forced mobilization.

There were protests against the war demanding action (Photo: East2West News)

Mobilized woman Paulina accuses Putin of “ridicule and ridicule” for declaring 2024 the year of the family, even though he was separated from her soldier husband for fourteen months.

A group begs Putin to allow their husbands and friends to return to Russia (Photo: East2West News)

Mobilized soldier Alexander Shpilevoy, 27, calls for the mobilized to be brought home and the war ended.

Mobilized soldier Alexander Shpilevoy, 27, asked Putin to let soldiers come home (Photo: East2West)

The Way Home asked, “What the heck is denazification and demilitarization?” Do you understand what you’re talking about?

“Every time you say these words, people die. Let’s live in peace! Or go to the front yourself and die.’

But relatives said Putin would never do that: “It won’t happen because the interests of the authorities must be served at the expense of the soldiers – ordinary Russians.”

‘How cynical do you have to be to continue this bacchanal and put a good face on a bad game? Won’t you stop until you kill all the young people?’

The channel showed a video in which 27-year-old mobilized soldier Alexander Shpilevoy said to Putin via video: “Let them go home, everyone wants to go home, everyone really wants to go home.”

Alexander said Russian propaganda is spreading the story that Ukrainian soldiers are being sent to war as “meat” – but that is exactly what is happening in Russia.

Paulina broke down in tears as she spoke about her husband (Image: East2West)

Paulina broke down in tears as she spoke about her husband (Image: East2West)

The wife of a mobilized Russian soldier tells how he is forced back to the front by cruel commanders, despite being maimed in a Ukrainian attack.

A woman’s husband is sent to an assault battalion despite his injuries (Photo: East2West)

Those mobilized “don’t care at all about Putin’s justification for the war,” Alexander said.

He also mocked Putin’s goal to invade and “demilitarize” Ukraine, warning that this would lead to a Russian bloodbath.

Alexander added: “I would like to believe it, I would like to believe it, but I don’t know as far as the objectives of the war are concerned, as far as the objectives of demilitarization are concerned.”

In a video, wife and mother Paulina mocked Putin for declaring 2024 the Year of the Family in Russia – while tearing apart countless families like hers.

She said: “I was amused that the President declared 2024 the Year of the Family. Why is it the year of the family and I don’t have a husband? It’s like mockery or ridicule…’

Her husband, an IT specialist, was mobilized 14 months ago and since then Paulina has been raising her child alone.

Through tears, she said, “I just want him to come home soon.”

Another woman told how her wounded husband was forced back into the war by Putin’s commanders even though he urgently needed hospital treatment.

She explained: “I am the wife of a mobilized fighter who… came out of deployment and can no longer feel his legs.

“He was supposed to be hospitalized, but… [instead] He will be assigned to the Sarmat battalion and will launch the attack. It’s simply impossible. His children need him, I beg you.

‘Save my husband’s life, at least let him get back on his feet…’

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