
Ukraine and Russia begin prisoner-exchange in swap set to be biggest of war
Russia
and
Ukraine
each released 390 prisoners on Friday and said they would free more in the coming days, in what is expected to be the biggest prisoner swap of the war so far.
An agreement
to exchange 1,000 prisoners each was the only concrete step towards peace
to emerge last week from the first direct talks between the warring sides in more than three years, when they failed to agree a ceasefire.
Both sides said they had each released 270 soldiers and 120 civilians so far, with more due to be released on Saturday and Sunday.
The freed Russians were in Belarus, which neighbours Ukraine, receiving psychological and medical assistance before being moved to Russia for further care, the Russian defence ministry said. They include civilians captured inside Russia's Kursk region during a Ukrainian incursion.
READ MORE
Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskiy
posted photographs of released captives, all with shaven heads, celebrating their release and wrapped in Ukrainian flags.
Ukrainian media outlet Espreso TV published a video of the wife of a prisoner crying tears of joy, wrapped in a flag on Kyiv's Independence Square. She said she had been waiting for her husband's release since 2022, and had just received the call from Ukrainian authorities confirming the good news.
'We waited, hoped and fought,' said the woman, whose name was given as Victoria.
Earlier, Ukrainian authorities told reporters to assemble at a location in the northern Chernihiv region in anticipation that some freed prisoners could be brought there.
Referring to the prisoner swap earlier on Friday, US president
Donald Trump
, who had pressed the sides to meet last week, wrote on Truth Social: 'Congratulations to both sides on this negotiation. This could lead to something big???'
Hundreds of thousands of soldiers are believed to have been wounded or killed on both sides in Europe's deadliest conflict since the second World War, although neither side publishes accurate casualty figures. Tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians have also died as Russian forces have besieged and bombarded Ukrainian cities.
Ukraine says it is ready for a 30-day ceasefire immediately.
Russia, which launched the war by invading its neighbour in 2022 and now occupies about a fifth of Ukraine, says it will not pause its assaults until conditions are first met. A member of the Ukrainian delegation called those conditions 'non-starters'.
Mr Trump, who has shifted US policy from supporting Ukraine towards accepting some of Russia's account of the war, had said he could tighten sanctions on Moscow if it blocked peace. But after
speaking to Mr Putin on Monday by phone
he decided to take no action for now.
Moscow says it is ready for talks while the fighting goes on, and wants to discuss what it calls the war's 'root causes', including its demands that Ukraine cede more territory and be disarmed and barred from military alliances with the West. Kyiv says this is tantamount to surrender and would leave the country defenceless in the face of future Russian attacks.
[
US and Russia exchange two more prisoners amid efforts to repair relations
Opens in new window
]
Russia claimed on Friday to have captured a settlement called Rakivka in Ukraine's northeastern Kharkiv region.
The governor of Ukraine's Odesa region, Oleh Kiper, said Russia had struck port infrastructure there with two missiles on Friday afternoon, killing one person and wounding eight. – Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
a day ago
- Irish Times
At least two killed in intense Russian drone attack on Kharkiv
A nine-minute-long Russian drone attack on Ukraine 's second largest city of Kharkiv in the middle of the night killed at least two people and injured 54, including five children, regional officials said on Wednesday. The intense strikes with 17 drones sparked fires in 15 units of a five-storey apartment building and caused other damage in the city close to the Russian border, Kharkiv mayor Ihor Terekhov said. 'There are direct hits on multi-storey buildings, private homes, playgrounds, enterprises and public transport,' Terekhov said on the Telegram messaging app. 'Apartments are burning, roofs are destroyed, cars are burnt, windows are broken.' A Reuters witness saw emergency rescuers helping to carry people out of damaged buildings, administering care and firefighters battling blazes in the dark. READ MORE Nine of the injured, including a two-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy, have been hospitalised, Oleh Sinehubov, the governor of the broader Kharkiv region, said on Telegram. He added that the strikes hit also a city trolley bus depot and several residential buildings. There was no immediate comment from Russia. Kharkiv, in Ukraine's northeast, withstood Russian full-scale advance in the early days of the war and has since been a frequent target of drone, missile and guided aerial bomb assaults. The attack followed Russia's two biggest assaults of the war on Ukraine this week, a part of intensified bombardments that Moscow said were retaliatory measures for Kyiv's recent attacks in Russia. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched on its smaller neighbour in February 2022. But thousands of civilians have died in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian. 'We are holding on. We are helping each other. And we will definitely survive,' Terekhov said. 'Kharkiv is Ukraine. And it cannot be broken.' Russia's air defence systems destroyed 32 Ukrainian drones overnight, the Russian defence ministry said on Wednesday. Half of the drones were downed over the southern Voronezh region, while the rest were intercepted over the Kursk, Tambov, Rostov region and the Crimean Peninsula, the ministry said on the Telegram messaging app. - Reuters


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Zelenskiy calls for ‘concrete actions' as hundreds of Russian drones and missiles strike Ukrainian cities
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has voiced his frustration with Donald Trump and called for 'concrete actions' rather than 'silence' after Russia launched one of its largest attacks on Kyiv since the war began. Seven of the Ukrainian capital's 10 districts were hit overnight after a total of 316 drones and seven missiles were launched at targets across the country in the early hours of Tuesday. Two people died in strikes on Odesa but it was Kyiv that was the focus of Russia's ferocious barrage. The unrelenting night-time raid stretched over five hours and will be seen as part of a continuing response by the Kremlin to Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb, which struck Russia's nuclear-capable bombers on Monday of last week . READ MORE The strikes on Tuesday morning followed a record 419 drones being launched at Ukraine the previous night. Ukraine's air defence systems shot down seven Russian missiles and 213 attack drones, while 64 drones were said to have disappeared from radars or were intercepted by electronic warfare systems. Clouds of smoke rise above the Ukrainian capital Kyiv following an overnight attack involving Russian drones and missiles. Photograph: Maxym Marusenko/EPA In a statement on his Telegram channel, Mr Zelenskiy appeared to criticise the lack of response from the US and others to the recent stepping up of Russia's attacks. President Trump has prevaricated over the question of further economic sanctions on the Kremlin. 'Russian strikes with missiles and Shaheds [drones] are louder than the efforts of the United States and others in the world to force Russia to peace,' Mr Zelenskiy said. 'Every night, instead of a ceasefire, there have been massive strikes with Shaheds, cruise missiles and ballistics. Today was one of the largest strikes on Kyiv. Odesa, the Dnipro region and Chernihiv region were also targeted.' He said 250 of the drones were Shaheds and two of the seven missiles fired were of ' North Korean production'. 'Ordinary houses and urban infrastructure were damaged, and even a maternity hospital in Odesa became a Russian target. Thirteen people were injured. Unfortunately, there are fatalities. My condolences to the relatives,' he added. 'It is important that the response to this and other similar Russian strikes is not the silence of the world but concrete actions. Actions by America, which has the power to force Russia to peace. The actions of Europe, which has no alternative but to be strong. The actions of others in the world who have called for diplomacy and an end to the war and who have been ignored by Russia. Hard pressure is needed for peace.' The buzzing of drones followed by explosions could be heard throughout the night in Kyiv, where residents had been told by local authorities to take shelter in bunkers. The city smelled of smoke on Tuesday with charred residential buildings and the remains of cars on the streets offering evidence of the impact of the strikes, which are believed to have targeted the city's energy infrastructure. Timur Tkachenko, the head of Kyiv's military district, said on Telegram: 'A difficult night for all of us. Throughout the night, the enemy relentlessly terrorised Kyiv with attack drones. They targeted civilian infrastructure and peaceful residents of the city.' Ukraine's foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, called for tougher sanctions on Russia and for air defences to strengthen Ukraine after the attack. 'Russia rejects any meaningful peace efforts and must face new, devastating sanctions. Already now. There is no more time to wait,' he said. A woman sits next to a damaged residential building following a drone attack in Odesa on Wednesday. Photograph: Oleksander Gimanov/AFP via Getty Images In Odesa, 10 drone strikes injured nine people as well as killing two, including a 59-year-old man. The Odesa regional governor, Oleh Kiper, said: 'The Russians hit a maternity hospital, an emergency medical ward and residential buildings.' Mr Zelenskiy's chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, claimed Russia had targeted civilian infrastructure. 'Russian attacks on civilian targets continue,' he wrote. 'Russia lies every day about wanting peace and every day it targets civilians.' – Guardian


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Russia and Ukraine exchange prisoners of war in first of series of planned swaps
Russia and Ukraine exchanged prisoners of war under the age of 25 on Monday in emotional homecoming scenes, the first step in a series of planned prisoner swaps that could become the biggest of the war so far. The exchange, announced by both sides, was the result of direct talks in Istanbul on June 2nd that resulted in an agreement to exchange at least 1,200 POWs on each side and to repatriate thousands of bodies of those killed in the war. The return of prisoners and the repatriation of bodies is one of the few issues the two sides have been able to agree on, even as their broader negotiations have failed to get close to ending Russia's war in Ukraine , now in its fourth year. Fighting has raged on, with Russia saying on Monday its forces had taken control of more territory in Ukraine's east-central region of Dnipropetrovsk and Kyiv saying Moscow had launched its largest drone attack of the war . READ MORE Officials in Kyiv said some of the Ukrainian prisoners who came home on Monday had been in Russian captivity since the beginning of the war. At a rendezvous point for the returning Ukrainian prisoners, soon after they crossed back into northern Ukraine an official handed one of the freed men a mobile phone so that he could call his mother, a video released by Ukrainian authorities showed. 'Hi Mum, I've arrived, I'm home!' the soldier shouted into the receiver, struggling to catch his breath because he was overcome by emotion. Neither side said how many prisoners had been swapped, but the Russian defence ministry said in a statement that the same number of military personnel had been exchanged on each side. Kremlin aide Vladimir Medinsky said at the weekend that a first list of 640 prisoners had been handed to Ukraine. [ Crimea was once a crossroads of civilisations, now it's stuck in a wartime cul-de-sac Opens in new window ] The Russian military said its returned servicemen were now in Belarus, a close Russian ally, where they were receiving psychological and medical assistance before being transferred to Russia for further care. Footage broadcast by Russia's RIA state news agency showed a group of freed Russian soldiers on board a coach raising their hands in the air and shouting: 'Hurrah, we're home.' The same group was shown holding a Russian flag and chanting 'Russia! Russia!' before boarding the coach. 'It is very difficult to convey what I'm feeling inside now. But I am very happy, proud and grateful to everyone who took part in this process, in the exchange and bringing us home,' said one freed Russian soldier. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said his country had received a first group of prisoners from Russia and that it would take several days to complete the swap. 'Today's exchange has begun. It will be done in several stages in the coming days,' Mr Zelenskiy said on the Telegram app. Freed Ukrainian POWs of war pose with flags following a prisoner swap with Russia. Photograph: EPA 'The process is quite complex, with many sensitive details, and negotiations continue virtually every day. We count on the full implementation of the humanitarian agreements reached during the meeting in Istanbul. We are doing everything possible to bring back every single person.' On Sunday night and in the early hours of Monday morning, Russia launched 479 drones at Ukraine in the war's biggest overnight drone bombardment, the Ukrainian air force said. As well as the drones, 20 missiles of various types were fired at different parts of Ukraine, according to the air force, which said the barrage targeted mainly central and western regions. Ukraine said its air defences destroyed 277 drones and 19 missiles in mid-flight, claiming that only 10 drones or missiles hit their target. Officials said one person was injured. It was not possible to independently verify the claims. Meanwhile, the Ukrainian military claimed on Monday that special operations forces struck two Russian fighter jets stationed at the Savasleyka airfield at the Nizhny Novgorod region, 650km from the border with Ukraine.