- Summary- Defence Ministry announced end of call-up on Oct 31- Councillors call for formal decree to end legal confusion- Say commanders refusing to discharge men already drafted- Kremlin says no further action is requiredDec 5 (Reuters) - Opposition representatives from five Russian regional councils have sent appeals urging President Vladimir Putin to issue a decree to end the partial military mobilisation he announced in September to boost Moscow's invasion force in Ukraine.The Defence Ministry announced the end of the call-up of 300,000 reservists on Oct. 31 after weeks of chaos in which hundreds of thousands of Russians fled the country and numerous reports emerged of the wrong men being drafted.Reuters saw similar appeals from opposition deputies in the Moscow, St. Petersburg, Pskov and Veliky Novgorod regions.The councillors' appeals said the lack of a decree ending mobilisation "creates legal uncertainty", allows "citizens to continue being drafted into the army" and "allows military commanders to deny citizens their discharge from service"."I know of cases where our military enlistment offices are already issuing January and February summonses today," said Boris Vishnevsky, a councillor from St Petersburg's Legislative Assembly who also signed an appeal to the Russian president."