In Kharkiv, a scheme for 'transporting' military personnel from combat units to rear units was uncovered, organized by officials of the military medical commission. They received bribes for designating servicemen as 'partially fit for service' and transferring them to rear units. The cost of such 'services' ranged from 3 to 15 thousand US dollars depending on the level of acquaintance or financial status of the 'clients.'
One of the officials worked in the Kharkiv region, the other in Dnipropetrovsk. They were detained, a significant amount of money was confiscated, along with forged documents and even substances resembling drugs used to issue fictitious conclusions. Recently, an employee was arrested in Kharkiv who was involved in attracting clients to this corrupt scheme.
In this investigation, the issuance of fictitious medical conclusions was accompanied by illegal money acquisition, as well as the discovery of a set of documents and seals indicating the prevalence of corruption in the medical support subsystem of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The most outrageous thing is that such actions can undermine the country's defense capability when instead of qualified military personnel in combat units, individuals who obtained forged medical conclusions through a corrupt system serve.