
Russia hands over 1,000 bodies, Ukraine 19 bodies of fallen soldiers
The war launched by Russia, now in its fourth year, has claimed tens of thousands of soldiers' lives on both sides.
Following talks in Istanbul in May, several prisoner exchanges have taken place in recent months.
Moscow has also pledged to return the bodies of thousands of soldiers. Russia said it had returned 7,000 bodies before the latest handover, while claiming Ukraine has transferred fewer than 100 in total.
Moscow portrays this as proof that Ukraine has suffered far higher battlefield losses. (DPA)

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Qatar Tribune
4 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Russia hands over 1,000 bodies, Ukraine 19 bodies of fallen soldiers
MoscowcTypeface:> Russia has returned the bodies of 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers, chief Russian negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said on Tuesday. In exchange, Ukraine handed over the remains of 19 Russian soldiers, Medinsky added in comments made on Telegram. Kiev confirmed it had received the bodies. The war launched by Russia, now in its fourth year, has claimed tens of thousands of soldiers' lives on both sides. Following talks in Istanbul in May, several prisoner exchanges have taken place in recent months. Moscow has also pledged to return the bodies of thousands of soldiers. Russia said it had returned 7,000 bodies before the latest handover, while claiming Ukraine has transferred fewer than 100 in total. Moscow portrays this as proof that Ukraine has suffered far higher battlefield losses. (DPA)

Qatar Tribune
4 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
It will be ‘rough situation' if Putin doesn't agree peace plan: Trump
PA Media/dpa London US President Donald Trump has said American jets could help defend Ukraine if there is a deal to end the war but acknowledged it was possible Russian President Vladimir Putin would reject a peace plan. He said it would be a 'rough situation' if Putin failed to agree peace terms but stressed that Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky had to show flexibility, including giving up hopes of getting Crimea back or joining NATO. The US president's comments came as British Prime Minister Keir Starmer held talks with members of the 'coalition of the willing', the nations prepared to contribute to guaranteeing Ukraine's security if a deal to end the Russian invasion can be reached. In a call on Tuesday, members of the group discussed the possibility of further sanctions on Russia, while planners from the nations will meet their US counterparts 'in the coming days', amid efforts to set up 'robust security guarantees', Starmer's office said. Starmer and Zelensky were among European leaders who travelled to Washington on Monday for talks at the White House. Those discussions have paved the way for a potential meeting between Zelensky and Putin for the first time since the Russian leader invaded his neighbour in 2022. Trump told Fox News: 'I hope President Putin is going to be good and if he's not, that's going to be a rough situation. 'And I hope that Zelensky, President Zelensky, will do what he has to do. He has to show some flexibility.' The UK and France have pledged to commit forces to Ukraine to deter Putin from launching a fresh assault on his neighbour if a deal is done to end the war. Trump said they were 'willing to put people on the ground', and added: 'We're willing to help them with things, especially probably if you could talk about by air, because there's nobody has the kind of stuff we have.' But he suggested that Putin was unlikely to launch another invasion as he was 'tired of it' after three years of war. 'We are going to find out about President Putin in the next couple of weeks, that I can tell you,' Trump said, acknowledging that it was 'possible he doesn't want to make a deal'. Starmer said work with the US on what the security guarantees would entail could start as soon as Tuesday. He said there was a 'real significant breakthrough when it comes to security guarantees, because we're now going to be working with the US on those security guarantees'. He told the BBC that teams from both sides of the Atlantic were starting 'the detailed work on that'. Trump spoke directly to Putin to begin planning a meeting between the Russian leader and Zelensky while hosting the gathering on Monday, which will then be followed by a three-way meeting involving himself.

Qatar Tribune
4 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Up to 300,000 Syrians possibly missing under Assad family rule
dpa Damascus A Syrian commission for missing persons estimated that between 120,000 and 300,000 people have gone missing during more than five decades of authoritarian rule by the Al Assad family. Mohammed Reda Jalkhi, the head of the National Commission for Missing Persons, said on Monday evening that between 120,000 and 300,000 people have gone missing since 1970. 'But the actual number may be much higher,' he told state news agency SANA. He said that the governmental commission mandate covers the period from 1970 until now. Hafez Al Assad served as president of Syria from 1971 till his death in 2000, after which his son, Bashar Al Assad, took over until he was overthrown by an rebel alliance in December. Jalkhi said that the commission, which was formed in May, has so far documented 63 mass graves and they have received information about other locations that are yet to be verified. Tens of thousands of people disappeared after the 2011 pro-democracy protests against Al Assad's regime escalated into a full-scale civil war, displacing some 14 million people and killing more than 300,000 civilians, according to UN estimates. The Syrian Network for Human Rights has previously said that around 157,000 went missing since March 2011. Since Bashar al-Assad fled to Moscow in December, the country has been ruled by a transitional administration led by President Ahmed al-Sharaa.



