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Russia’s Putin provides debt relief to new Ukraine war recruits and their families

By Thomson Reuters May 25, 2026 | 7:39 PM

May 26 (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a decree providing debt relief to new Ukraine war recruits and their families, the ​Kremlin said late on Monday, adding to ‌support tools as Moscow seeks to boost its army in more than four-year-long war.

People who signed a contract with the Russian defence ministry from May 1 and/or their spouses are ‌free ​from their debts of up ⁠to 10 million roubles ($139,700) ⁠if a legal claim to collect those debts was in force before that date, the decree posted on the Kremlin’s website said.

The contract to ​join the ‘special military operation’ –  what Russia calls its February 2022 invasion and occupation of Ukraine – should ⁠be signed for at least ⁠one year, the Kremlin said.

The write-off is ​about the price of a 35 square metre studio-type ​apartment in Moscow, according to a Cian real ‌estate database.

The law adds to a variety of support measures for Russian fighters in the war, from big payouts to preferable admissions for higher education, ⁠as the Kremlin seeks to boost its forces at a time when the U.S.-led peace talks have stalled.

Each side accuses ⁠the other ‌of seeking to escalate the conflict, ⁠and Ukraine plans to send reinforcements to ​its ‌northern regions to counter what it ​believes are ⁠Russian plans for a new offensive.

On Monday, Putin also signed a decree indefinitely extending rental rights for state land for those fighting in Ukraine, the Kremlin said.

($1 = 71.6000 roubles)

(Reporting by Jekaterīna Golubkova in Tokyo; Editing ​by Lincoln Feast.)