logo
Return of Ukrainian children forcefully deported to Russia is non-negotiable, Kyiv says

Return of Ukrainian children forcefully deported to Russia is non-negotiable, Kyiv says

Yahoo17-04-2025

While most Europeans are travelling home to spend Easter break with their families, up to 20,000 Ukrainian children remain in Russia after being illegally deported from Ukraine, Ukraine's deputy foreign minister told Euronews.
'This is a time when people celebrate Easter with their loved ones in the family. And those kids are left without their families. Many of them do not even remember already their parents because Russia erases their identity,' Mariana Betsa said.
"Ukrainian children are non-negotiable," and any peace talks and negotiations should include "unconditional return of each and every child back home to Ukraine," Betsa insisted.
Ukraine has been able to verify Russia's deportation of 19,546 children to date. These are the children for whom detailed information has been collected — their place of residence in Ukraine and their territorial location in Russia are known.
The actual figure is likely to be much higher.
Yale's Humanitarian Research Lab placed the number of deported Ukrainian children closer to 35,000. Moscow claimed that the number could be as high as 700,000.
The US-based Institute for the Study of War think tank (ISW) insists that the true number of deported children is near-impossible to verify, "but the implication remains the same — Russia has stolen tens, potentially hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian children with the explicit intent of eradicating their Ukrainian identities and turning them into Russians."
Moreover, the ISW stealing the children was one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's priorities, referring to the revelations of Ukrainian human rights activists.
They uncovered Kremlin documents dated 18 February 2022, which laid out plans to remove Ukrainian children from orphanages in occupied Luhansk and Donetsk regions and bring them to Russia under the guise of 'humanitarian evacuations'.
These documents revealed that Russia planned to target vulnerable Ukrainian children, especially those without parental care, before the full-scale invasion had even begun.
'In the subsequent three years, Russia has embarked on a Kremlin-directed, deeply institutionalised project to abduct Ukrainian children and forcibly turn them into the next generation of Russians.'
Betsa says 1.6 million Ukrainian children still remain in the temporarily occupied territories at this time.
Russia is deliberately erasing the identity of the illegally deported children, according to Ukraine's deputy foreign minister.
Betsa told Euronews that it is challenging to trace and identify these children because their names and IDs are being changed, especially when it comes to younger kids, who have been forced into adoption in Russia.
With the full-scale invasion of Ukraine and the first intentional deportation of Ukrainian children, Putin signed a decree for a simplified procedure for the acquisition of Russian citizenship for Ukrainian 'children left without parental care and incapacitated persons'.
This amounts to a legalisation of the process of deporting Ukrainian children and forcibly granting them Russian citizenship.
Russia uses the children as "an instrument of its aggressive policy towards Ukraine," Betsa says.'What Russia does is it weaponises the Ukrainian children,' she added.
Yale's Humanitarian Research Lab has confirmed that Russia is using at least 43 children's camps throughout the country to house deported children, at least 32 of which are explicitly 're-education' facilities.
Russia uses these camps to indoctrinate Ukrainian children, "punishing them for their Ukrainian identities and forcibly instilling pro-Russian sentiment through carefully curated Kremlin-approved curricula and 'military-patriotic' training courses."
Ukraine's deputy foreign minister reiterated in the interview with Euronews that there is no just peace without the return of the prisoners of war, illegally detained persons and without the return of each and every child.
'These are red lines for Ukraine. Every child should be unconditionally returned back home to Ukraine," Betsa said.
Earlier, Volodymyr Zelenakyy announced the matter was "a major priority for Kyiv in recent ceasefire negotiations with the United States in Saudi Arabia."
In a statement issued following talks with Ukraine, the US said it remains "committed" to returning forcibly kidnapped Ukrainian children, as well as exchanging prisoners of war and releasing civilian detainees.
However, the Trump administration cut funding for Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab, which had investigated and detailed the mass deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia.
Under the 2022 contract with the lab, the US government was responsible for its database. When the government cut off its support, the lab's team members lost access to the irreplaceable data they had collected, including the evidence of Russia's war crimes.
The lab shared some of this evidence with European authorities and the International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued arrest warrants for Putin and his Children's Rights Commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova for forcibly deporting Ukrainian children.
Responding to pressure from Congress members, the Trump administration later restored the Lab's funding for about six weeks to ensure the proper transfer of the critical data on the children to the appropriate authorities.
Related
Detained, deported and brainwashed: How Moscow 'Russifies' Ukrainian children
War on children: How Russia is stealing generations of Ukrainians
Betsa insists that Ukraine raises the issue of forcefully deported at each and every negotiation, "bilateral, multilateral, within international organisations, UN, Council of Europe, everywhere, also including in our bilateral talks with the US."
'These are red lines for Ukraine. Every child should be unconditionally returned back home to Ukraine.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

North Korea's Frigate That Partially Sunk Appears In Dry Dock With Mangled Superstructure
North Korea's Frigate That Partially Sunk Appears In Dry Dock With Mangled Superstructure

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

North Korea's Frigate That Partially Sunk Appears In Dry Dock With Mangled Superstructure

The North Korean Choi-Hyun class frigate that rolled over on its side during a botched launch ceremony attended by Kim Jong Un back on May 21st is now in a dry dock, and new satellite images give us a better view of the extent of the topside damage. The images come to us from our friends at Maxar. They show the still unnamed frigate, the second in its class, in a dry dock facility in Rajin, which sits near the border with Russia in northeastern North Korea. The ship made the roughly 50-mile voyage under tow from its birthplace in Chongjin. The vessel was successfully refloated and turned upright around June 3rd, after what was likely a very high-pressure frenzy of a recovery effort. 'Detailed underwater and internal inspection of the warship confirmed that, unlike the initial announcement, there were no holes made at the warship's bottom, the hull starboard was scratched, and a certain amount of seawater flowed into the stern section through the rescue channel,' per a report from KCNA on May 23. 'The extent of damage to the warship is not serious, and the result of the flooding process immediately after the accident is only information necessary to take practical rehabilitation measures. The above-said data have no connection with the cause of the accident and the identification of its responsibility… Experts estimated that it will take two or three days to keep the balance of the warship by pumping up the seawater from the flooded chamber and making the bow leave the slipway, and 10-odd days to restore the warship's side,' KCNA also said in its May 23 report. Somewhat stunningly, they met that 10-day goal. But Kim's other deadline was to restore the ship to its previous state by the end of June, which is pretty much impossible. Still, even the appearance that this is the case would be a win for the extremely image-conscious regime. The ship clearly has structural damage to its superstructure, with mangled metal and bent lines appearing in the satellite images. Some areas of the ship were flooded with seawater, which would have had a major impact on any machinery and electronics in those areas. All this will take time to remediate, and we still don't know the condition of the ship's hull, although it did make the 50-mile voyage to its current resting spot. This is a large and complex vessel for North Korea to repair, and the facilities at Rajin are not extensive. It is still possible that the North Koreans are getting help from China or Russia, something we had initially speculated. The latter of the two, in particular, is working extensively with Pyongyang in terms of military assistance in return for North Korea's support of its invasion of Ukraine. The location of the ship near the Russian border in an economic zone dominated by cross-border trade also points to the possibility that Moscow is lending a hand. Whatever the case, North Korea seems set on 'righting the ship' after what was an incredibly embarrassing moment on the international stage — one that was impossible to conceal due to satellite imagery. Contact the author: Tyler@

Waves of explosions rock Kyiv amid Russian missile, drone attack
Waves of explosions rock Kyiv amid Russian missile, drone attack

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Waves of explosions rock Kyiv amid Russian missile, drone attack

Editor's note: This is a developing story and is being updated. In the early hours of June 10, Kyiv came under another Russian attack, involving ballistic missiles and drones. Explosions were heard across the city as air defense systems engaged the targets. Air defense earlier warned of the threat of missile and drone attack. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko reported that cars were on fire in the Shevchenkivskyi district, while drone debris fell on the grounds of a school in the Obolonskyi district. Emergency services were dispatched to the sites of attack, and medics were also called to the Podilskyi and Darnytskyi districts. In the Dniprovskyi district, smoke was seen coming from non-residential buildings, and a fire broke out at a non-residential site in the Obolonskyi district. Klitschko said a new wave of Russian drones was heading toward the capital and urged residents to remain in shelters as the mass attack on Kyiv continued. The renewed assault comes just a day after Russia launched a record 499 aerial weapons against Ukraine, including 479 Shahed-type attack drones, decoy drones, four Kh-47M2 Kinzhal ballistic missiles, 10 Kh-101 cruise missiles, three Kh-22 cruise missiles over the Black Sea, two Kh-31P anti-radar missiles, and one Kh-35 cruise missile from occupied Crimea. Ukraine reported it had neutralized 479 of those targets — 292 were shot down and 187 were disrupted through electronic warfare. Read also: Exclusive: Russia's ballistic missile production up at least 66% over past year, according to Ukrainian intel figures We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.

Russia's new drone strikes hit Kyiv, maternity ward in Odesa, Ukraine says
Russia's new drone strikes hit Kyiv, maternity ward in Odesa, Ukraine says

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Russia's new drone strikes hit Kyiv, maternity ward in Odesa, Ukraine says

By Pavel Polityuk KYIV (Reuters) -Russia launched another large drone attack on Ukraine, striking Kyiv and damaging a maternity ward in the southern port of Odesa, regional officials said early on Tuesday. The overnight attacks follow Russia's biggest drone strike on Ukraine on Monday - part of intensified operations that Moscow said were retaliatory measures for Kyiv's recent brazen attacks inside Russia. Medics were called to four districts of Kyiv a couple hours after midnight on Tuesday, including the historic Podil neighbourhood, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on the Telegram messaging app. The military said the strikes were still ongoing and urged people to seek bomb shelters. The full scale of the attack was not immediately clear. "Enemy drones are simultaneously attacking several districts of the city," Timur Tkachenko, head of Kyiv's military administration said on the Telegram messaging app. "There is damage to residential buildings and fires. Rescuers are working at the sites." Reuters' witnesses heard a series of loud explosions throughout the city. In the southern port of Odesa, a "massive" drone attack targeted an emergency medical building and a maternity ward, as well as residential buildings, Oleh Kiper, governor of the broader Odesa region said on Telegram. Regarding the maternity hospital there were no casualties and patients and staff were evacuated, Kiper said. He posted photos of broken windows in what looked like a medical facility and of damages to facades of several buildings. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched against Ukraine more than three years ago. But thousands of civilians have been killed in the conflict, the chief majority of them Ukrainian.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store