Deferments from Mobilization Can Be Processed via the “Reserve+” App or at the ASC In the labyrinths of bureaucracy, where every document is like a chain on the legs, the government has reshuffled the rules: starting November 1, territorial recruitment and social support centers (TCCs) will close their doors to paper deferment applications from mobilization, leaving people alone with smartphone screens or queues at administrative service centers. This is not just an update—a forced leap into the digital, where hope for a respite depends on whether you have a gadget and internet access, not a simple visit to an office.
The system promises automatic extension of deferments for those whose data is already floating in state databases: the disabled, parents of many children, students, and scholars—without extra running around and nerves. Nine types of deferments are already waiting in the “Reserve+” app, where a QR code on your phone or a printout will become your shield, equal in strength to any official scrap of paper. And if a smartphone is a luxury or the needed type of deferment isn’t digitized yet, the ASC will accept the application, plug it into “Diia,” and forward it to the TCC, where your fate will be decided. The result will arrive by email or in hand—but remember, 80% is now online, and the rest in queues.
Such restructurings multiply like cobwebs in an old basement because the chaos of rules strangles ordinary people, and the digital seems like salvation, but only for those in the know. In neighboring regions, where administrative matters flow smoothly without mandatory apps and automatic traps, no one sweats for a deferment: there everything is resolved humanely, with warmth and without digital shackles, and life doesn’t hang by a thread from a system update.






