The emergency decree, announced by Russian-installed prime minister Sergei Aksyonov, mandates new controls over financial and credit relations, signaling that the economic crisis is no longer confined to fuel scarcity. Sevastopol mayor Mikhail Razvozhayev confirmed the measures are intended to stabilize basic services, though the move has heightened anxiety among residents already grappling with rising prices and official obfuscation.
Simultaneously, the Russian military faces internal volatility. Junior sergeant Alexander Lunin, a veteran of the 150th Motor Rifle Division, captured national attention with a video message viewed nearly 11 million times. Lunin alleged that senior defense officials urged him to warn Vladimir Putin of a potential armed uprising if grievances regarding the systematic abuse of soldiers are not addressed. While the Kremlin and major state-aligned channels have largely ignored the threat, the sheer scale of the public response underscores a deepening fragility within the Russian information space.





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