logo
Thousands of Ukraine's children vanished into Russia. This one made it back.

Thousands of Ukraine's children vanished into Russia. This one made it back.

IOL News2 days ago

Illia Matviienko, 12, shows one of his favorite Lego toys at home in Uzhhorod, Ukraine, on April 12.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
Lizzie Johnson and Kostiantyn Khudov
The boy from Mariupol still wasn't ready to walk to the bus stop alone, so just before 8am, he and his grandmother set off for school together. He reached for her hand, zipping her fingers in his own, and stole a sip of her coffee.
Illia Matviienko was almost 13 but still got lost easily. Three years had passed since his mother bled out in his arms after a Russian shelling, since a neighbour chipped her grave in the frozen winter of their yard, since soldiers found him alone and took him deeper into the occupied Donetsk territory, where he was put up for adoption.
There, he almost became a different boy: a Russian one.
Until his grandmother, Olena Matviienko, spotted him in a 26-second Russian propaganda video. Illia became an extraordinary test case for how, and whether, Ukraine could claw back its missing children - a journey that took Olena across four international borders and deep into Russia.
'I wouldn't have found him if I didn't see the video,' Olena, 64, said at their home in Uzhhorod, in far western Ukraine. 'He would be with a different family now. How much would he remember of who he was?'
Illia's return in 2022 after weeks in a hospital in occupied Ukraine showed the difficulty of just getting back one child - let alone the tens of thousands of Ukrainian children now at the center of Kyiv's demands for peace. Deported or disappeared into Russia, their plight has united American politicians to pressure President Donald Trump for their safe return and spurred war crimes charges against Russian President Vladimir Putin and his deputy, children's rights commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova, for their illegal transfer - charges a Kremlin spokesman disputed as 'outrageous and unacceptable.'
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Illia and his grandmother, Olena Matviienko, 66, take a walk in the city center.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
During a meeting at the Vatican in May, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed directly to Pope Leo XIV, asking for the church's assistance in bringing the children home. Ukraine wants a full accounting of all the children taken to Russia and their repatriation as part of any peace settlement.
Exactly how many children are missing is unknown.
The Conflict Observatory - part of Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab, which has consistently provided the most accurate data but will shutter on July 1 because of Trump's federal funding cuts - has verified that at least 19 500 children were forcibly deported from occupied areas of Ukraine, funneled into re-education camps or adopted by Russian families, their identities erased.
The real number is probably much higher, senior Ukrainian officials say, but cannot be proved because of poor recordkeeping. 'Maybe 50 000. Maybe 100 000. Maybe higher. Only Russia can provide us with this information,' said Mykola Kuleba, former children's ombudsman for Ukraine and head of the nonprofit Save Ukraine.
In three years of full-scale war, only a small fraction of them have been returned - about 1 300 children - in deals brokered by Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and the Holy See, as well as in covert rescue missions run by volunteers.
Progress is slow and excruciating because Russia 'changes their names, their place of birth, their date of birth,' said Daria Zarivna, an adviser to Zelensky's chief of staff who works on the Ukrainian initiative Bring Kids Back UA. 'All ties are cut.'
Olena journeyed across four international borders and deep into Russia after seeing Illia in a 26-second video.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
'I was Ukrainian'
When Olena first brought Illia home to Uzhhorod in the spring of 2022, he slept with the lights on and the bedroom door wide open. Sirens and loud noises terrified him. He had four friends at school but feared no one understood what he'd been through.
As one of the first children to return from Russia since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, Illia's case soon went public. Olena began receiving calls for him to testify in front of roomfuls of politicians. He agreed to speak to anyone who would listen.
Germany's parliament came first. Illia was instructed to ignore the crowd, to only look at the person speaking to him. By the time he appeared at the United Nations last year, he was no longer nervous. He waited his turn, then carefully answered questions. He was barely visible behind the microphone - his unruly thatch of dark hair and moon-pale skin obscured.
And then he told his story.
The Russian soldiers found him a day after his mother died, he said, starting at the beginning.
It was March 2022, and for weeks, he and his mother, Nataliia, had cowered in a basement in Mariupol, melting snow to drink and cooking over an open fire when their gas ran out. They ventured outside to look for food - and were badly injured by the Russian shelling of a nearby building. Illia's legs were bloody and shattered, the back of his left thigh a gaping wound. Nataliia sustained a serious head injury. She dragged her son into a nearby apartment building. They fell asleep inside, arms knotted around each other.
The next morning, Illia awoke to stillness.
Olena shows a photo of her daughter Nataliia and a photo of her makeshift grave.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
A neighbour took Nataliia's body away. Then, men in Russian uniforms arrived and drove Illia to a hospital in the city of Donetsk, 75 miles from the siege. Orphans from Mariupol filled the third floor. Illia listened to doctors debate whether to amputate his left leg before opting against it. He had surgery without anesthesia, he said, and was later interviewed on camera about his mother's death by a stranger.
Instead of looking for his family or contacting his home country, as required by international law, officials issued him a Russian birth certificate and put him up for adoption. A social worker visited his hospital room, gifting him an orange plush Garfield cat and teaching him a Russian poem about a bear. She said she planned to adopt him.
'I didn't want to go,' Illia said later. 'It was Russia, and I was Ukrainian.'
He befriended the boy next door, Vitalii, whose parents were also missing. Nurses told the boys that they - along with 30 other children - would soon be sent to Moscow.
Illia wondered where his grandmother was.
Illia with his friend Eldar at school in Uzhhorod.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
Olena's journey
More than 1 200 kilometers away in Uzhhorod, Olena was reeling. A family friend had sent her a Russian propaganda video posted online of Illia in his hospital bed, speaking into a blue-and-red microphone.
Olena grew up in the eastern industrial territory that Russia now controlled, working as a machine operator in a factory, then selling bread and cookies for a local bakery. When Illia's father abandoned Nataliia at six months pregnant, Olena vowed to help her daughter take care of the baby.
She wasn't breaking that promise now.
The only document she had to prove Illia was her grandson was a copy of Nataliia's passport. Volunteers at a local shelter helped her get copies of the rest - Illia's reissued Ukrainian birth certificate, her housing registration, custody paperwork, the police investigation into her daughter's death. She tucked the documents in a clear plastic bag and contacted the Presidential Office, which launched a first-of-its-kind special operation to get Illia back and, through volunteers in Russia, helped Olena get in touch with the hospital in Donetsk.
On the phone, the head doctor told her Illia's adoption was pending.
'Don't you dare,' she remembers telling him.
Within weeks, Olena and another man - whose young granddaughter, Kira, was also being held in Russia - boarded a special diplomatic train to Poland. Once there, Olena said they flew to Moscow on a private plane provided by a Russian oligarch, then took a 20-hour train to Donetsk. In the early years of the war, such an audacious journey was still possible, but now it's often not, officials say.
After finally reaching the hospital, Olena wrapped a distraught Illia in her arms.
'He didn't believe it was me,' Olena said. 'He lost his hope. He didn't actually believe I would come and bring him back to Ukraine. Not until the very last minute … did he believe it.'
As one of the first children to return from Russia since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, Illia's case went public and he's testified about his experience.
Image: Oksana Parafeniuk/For The Washington Post
The lucky one
In the park out front of his school, Illia kissed Olena goodbye.
He cut across the damp grass and veered inside, past a map of Ukraine - Crimea still tethered to the rest of the country, Mariupol tucked safely within its borders, Russia separated by a thick line of black.
In Room #40, he sat near a window with a friend until class began. After a short quiz, his teacher Tetiana Dolgova observed the nationwide moment of silence for all the war had taken.
'Thank God this city is remote from the front lines,' she told the students. 'We need to remember every day who gave their lives for our happiness and freedom. It's not only about our servicemen at the front lines. Your classmate Illia witnessed the awfulness of this war with his own eyes.'
When the students turned to look at him, he didn't duck his head. He was more confident now, the years dulling some of his memories.
He could still recall Mariupol - how he and his mother would ride the city bus to the beach and wade in the cool waves of the Sea of Azov, and in the winter their snowball fights - but he thought about it less frequently.
Photos from a family friend showed his former home in rubble, his two boxes of Lego gone, his five outdoor cats and two dogs vanished. Another photo showed his mother's grave, a wooden cross planted near the fence in the yard, overgrown with parched yellow grass - a place he could never visit.
In Uzhhorod, Illia keeps his belongings on his grandmother's ironing board. The orange Garfield cat from the Russian social worker. A blue snake gifted by Olena after he testified to The Hague. A whale from Portugal, where he attended a 17-day rehabilitation programme. A bunny from Okhmatdyt Children's Hospital in Kyiv, where he is still in treatment for his legs, the shrapnel shifting painfully during gym.
'I will have them forever,' he said of his plush animals. 'They represent periods of my life and memories, from Donetsk to here.'
He celebrates two birthdays now: the day he was born and the day Olena realized he was alive.
Illia knew he was lucky. Russia had upended his life as he knew it - but he still had his identity. He was old enough to remember who he was. Unlike so many other Ukrainian children, he'd been found. Sometimes, he wondered if Vitalii, his friend in the hospital in Donetsk, had been, too. Or maybe he was now living in Moscow.
Serhiy Morgunov and Serhii Korolchuk contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

From besties to frenemies: Donald Trump and Elon Musk
From besties to frenemies: Donald Trump and Elon Musk

TimesLIVE

time3 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

From besties to frenemies: Donald Trump and Elon Musk

The puzzling rise to presidential fame for Donald Trump has been met with just as much fervour as Elon Musk's ascension in US politics. What seemingly started off as a bromance between like-minded political allies soon turned into a sour feud that spilled out on social media. On the one hand, Musk claimed Trump would never have made his return to the White House without his help. On the other, Trump believes his former political partner is just throwing his toys out of the cot. But what has led to the rise and eventual fallout of America's biggest social players? From Mara-a-Lago playdates to exploding satellites, here's how the political BFFs became IRL enemies. 1990: THE POLITICAL BACHELOR Described by ex-New York mayor Ed Koch as 'a bachelor who lived for politics', Trump's ascension to the White House dates back to the 90s. One of the biggest interviews he gave, suggesting he has been aware of fans calling for him to enter the Oval Office, was with Playboy. Critics at the time also noted that his main focus was on the working class and the bills that affect businesses. 1999: YOU'VE GOT Enamoured by digital entrepreneurship, one of Musk's first ventures into the digital space was co-founding Zip2 with his brother. The business was a digitised version of the Yellow Pages and sold for more than $300m. The windfall would help Musk start X being a letter he would become obsessed with over the years. The site was built to be a digital payment system and would later lead to some of his strongest connections. With three other co-founders, the business would help establish Musk as a force to be reckoned with. During this time, Trump would announce on the Larry King Show that he would be taking politics seriously, announcing the formation of a 'presidential exploratory committee' that would become effective the day after the interview. Much like Musk at the time, his political opinion was liberal, saying he was 'getting much more liberal, on health care and other things. I really say, what's the purpose of a country if you're not going to have defence and health care?' 2000: WHEN PAY MET PAL would eventually merge with Confinity and become PayPal as it is known today. Now working with a new partner, Peter Thiel, the pair would sell PayPal two years later. Musk was on honeymoon when the deal was made and he was removed as CEO, according to The Times. 2002: AMERICAN DREAMS Musk, who has dual South African and Canadian citizenship, started his process of becoming an American citizen in 1996. While no reasons have been published as to why the American dream was calling him, Musk initially had a study visa when he studied at the University of Pennsylvania. This would help him become a naturalised American. This would also be the year Musk became famous for his involvement in SpaceX and its subsidiary satellite business, Starlink. Musk's odd business deals would also come to the fore at this time when he founded The Musk Foundation, which benefited OpenAI, a business he also owned. Several donors admitted to pumping much of their wealth into the foundation. 2004: TESLA AND THE CITY A year after it was founded, Musk's favourite adopted baby, Tesla, landed in his lap. By 2008, he managed to wrangle the CEO position. All thanks to a $6.5m investment. 2011: THE THIEL SINGER PayPal Mafia member Peter Thiel would come back into the spotlight when his future mentee JD Vance would write a sugary OpEd in the Catholic magazine The Lamp where he described meeting Thiel as 'the most siginificant moment of my life'. 2015: AI ACTUALLY Musk's meteoric rise saw with it the growing interest in AI. He would take a lead role at OpenAI with the sentiment that he could help develop 'friendly' AI. Meanwhile, Vance would embrace his first career pivot out of law and join Thiel's company, Mithril Capital. This would also put a spotlight on Vance as a writer when another column of his garnered fame for him and Thiel's business. This would also help him consider a run for office. 2016: LIFE AS WE BLOW IT Musk's growing fame and pursuits would soon see him cross paths with Facebook billionaire Mark Zuckerberg. But the two were not keen on braiding each other's hair, especially after Zuckerberg slighted Musk for his failed SpaceX maiden flight. The feud was ignited by Zuckerberg's Facebook post that claimed the SpaceX flight destroyed one of his satellites, while Musk chose Twitter as his weapon of choice to retort, 'Yeah, my fault for being an idiot. We did give them a free launch to make up for it and I think they had some insurance.' While mean girls like Regina George of Mean Girls relied on a private burn book, Musk continued to throw shade at any rival, including Trump. Musk said he was not confident of his role as an American president because 'he doesn't seem to have the sort of character that reflects well on the US'. Trump would not hit back but remained silent on the criticism. Instead, their bond would be cemented a month into Trump's first month in office that would see Musk join his advisory council. 2017: ALONG CAME CLIMATE CHANGE It wouldn't be long before Musk was back on the Twitter streets to vent his frustrations with Trump. In a tweet, Musk announced he was stepping down from the Oval Office after the US' exit from the Paris Climate Agreement. Musk was still liberal in his political beliefs, even posting support for the LGBTQ+ community, swatting off any homophobes from buying Teslas. Vance would echo the sentiments in his writing that spoke ill of Trump, even comparing him to Hitler. Zuckerberg and Musk would continue to bicker, particularly on the subject of AI. The back and forth would end with a Tweet from Musk stating the Facebook founder's 'understanding of the subject is limited'. 2018: WHAT'S FACEBOOK GOT TO DO WITH IT? Musk and Zuckerberg's relationship worsened. It would eventually push Musk off the platform and see him embrace Twitter as a premier space for communication. When speaking to WhatsApp founder Brian Acton, he would ask 'What's Facebook?' and suggest everyone leave the platform. At this time, Trump was taking a 'very restrained' approach to social media. 2021: A VANCE TO REMEMBER Vance would finally make it into the inner circle thanks to his PayPal Mafia bestie, Thiel. The latter would introduce him to Trump at Mar-a-Lago to repair their difficult relationship. Trump endorsed him a year later during his run as a senator for Ohio. 2022: HOW TO WIN A MUSK IN 10 DAYS Smooth-talking Musk, calling him the greatest genius on a par with Thomas Edison, Trump had his right-hand man back on his side. Six months later, Trump would call Musk 'another bull**** artist' in response to his promise to buy Twitter. Trump's feathers were ruffled by the fact that he was already on a mission to open his own social media business, Truth Social. The clip went viral on Twitter, Musk's preferred playground, so naturally he had a response: 'I don't hate the man, but it's time for Trump to hang up his hat & sail into the sunset.' The back and forth would continue with Trump claiming Musk would come crawling back, to which Musk responded: 'Lmaooo [laughing my *** off].' Much to Trump's surprise, Musk went through with the Twitter acquisition in October. Musk would extend an olive branch by running a poll to reinstate Trump on Twitter after the Twitter ban. The vote was for his return at 51.8%. Shortly after that, he would rename the platform X. 2023: SLEEPLESS IN THE US BORDER A considerable shift in Musk's politics would come up late in the year when he fully backed Trump's US border wall. 'We actually do need a wall and we need to require people to have some shred of evidence to claim asylum to enter, as everyone is doing that ...' Musk wrote. However, nothing was official about his backing of either the Democrats or the Republicans at the time. Elon Musk receives a golden key from Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House. Image: REUTERS/Nathan Howard/File Photo 2024: HOW TRUMP GOT HIS MUSK BACK After Trump's shooting incident during a rally, Musk backed him as his official candidate seconds later. There were claims that Musk footed $45m. A month later, the pair went live on X where Musk would shoot his shot at a government efficiency job. Trump would also start to embrace Twitter and AI as a means of communication. They would have their first public appearance in 2024 when Trump returned to the scene of the crime in Pennsylvania calling himself 'dark MAGA' and sporting a black Make America Great Again T-shirt. Other than going viral for his childish antics, Musk announced he would give away $1m to voters in swing states who signed a petition for free speech and the right to bear arms. NOVEMBER 2024: MAMMA MAR-A-LAGO The relationship would be cemented by the very same trip with Vance in Mara-a-Lago. They would spend the night with other Republican supporters to watch the live election results. Trump announced the appointment of Musk and former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy as leaders of Doge (department of government efficiency). The pair would be spotted at a SpaceX launch. It was at this point that Musk called himself 'the first buddy', amid reports he was sitting in on several meetings with international dignitaries. Trump would also hire Thiel and PayPal Mafia member David Sacks, the latter focused on advising the president on AI and cryptocurrencies. DECEMBER 2025: MR & MR PRESIDENT Tensions would rise again when media outlets would start rumours of 'President Musk'. Trump would eventually denounce the rumours of Musk's ascension to the White House. The rumour would be quelled by news of Musk renting out a $2,000 cottage on the premises of Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence. While he did not take it to X this time around, Musk would leave Trump and other Republicans irate over time. Sources told Mediate that Trump was 100% annoyed with Musk's spat with MAGA members about H1B visas (a type of working visa in the US), which they simplified as 'two tigers cannot live on one mountain top'. JANUARY 2025: FAR FROM THE MAGA CROWD After a tour de force of surprise announcements, Trump left the globe in a tailspin. This would also include the unexpected exit of Vivek Ramaswamy from Doge to run for the Ohio governor seat in 2026. With Musk in the driver's seat, critics started to notice he could not deliver on the promises he made. This included 100,000 layoffs that would land the Trump administration in hot water for the job cuts. The Independent reported that things were only getting worse for Musk and Trump's supporters with a West Wing brawl between him and Treasury secretary Scott Bessent making headlines. MAY 2025: IT ENDS WITH DOGE Things would start to fall apart between the pair when it was announced during a cabinet meeting late in April that Musk would be leaving Doge. His last day in the position would be in May. The reasons Musk cited were that Doge would be able to run on its own and that he needed to spend less time in the capital city. Trump would continue business as usual until Musk criticised his 'Big Beautiful Bill'. JUNE 2025: MY BIG FAT BEAUTIFUL BILL Musk would find resolve in expressing his anger on X again as he continued to criticise the Big Beautiful Bill. 'I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it any more. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it,' he posted. Musk's qualms with the bill were that it could potentially ramp up US debt. However, during a White House briefing Trump expressed his disappointment with Musk's posts, saying 'he [Musk] had no problem with it' in earlier conversations about the bill. The pair would trade blows on their respective sites, Truth Social and X. Trump made disparaging comments about Tesla and Musk took parting shots in which he suggested the president wouldn't have won the election without him.

Russia faces struggle to replace bombers lost in Ukrainian drone strikes
Russia faces struggle to replace bombers lost in Ukrainian drone strikes

Daily Maverick

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

Russia faces struggle to replace bombers lost in Ukrainian drone strikes

By Mark Trevelyan and Tom Balmforth Satellite photos of airfields in Siberia and Russia's far north show extensive damage from the attacks, with several aircraft completely burnt out, although there are conflicting versions of the total number destroyed or damaged. The United States assesses that up to 20 warplanes were hit – around half the number estimated by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy – and around 10 were destroyed, two U.S. officials told Reuters. The Russian government on Thursday denied that any planes were destroyed and said the damage would be repaired, but Russian military bloggers have spoken of loss or serious damage to about a dozen planes, accusing commanders of negligence. The strikes – prepared over 18 months in a Ukrainian intelligence operation dubbed 'Spider's Web', and conducted by drones that were smuggled close to the bases in trucks – dealt a powerful symbolic blow to a country that, throughout the Ukraine war, has frequently reminded the world of its nuclear might. In practice, experts said, they will not seriously affect Russia's nuclear strike capability which is largely comprised of ground- and submarine-based missiles. However, the Tu-95MS Bear-H and Tu-22M3 Backfire bombers that were hit were part of a long-range aviation fleet that Russia has used throughout the war to fire conventional missiles at Ukrainian cities, defence plants, military bases, power infrastructure and other targets, said Justin Bronk, an aviation expert at the RUSI think tank in London. The same fleet had also been carrying out periodic patrol flights into the Arctic, North Atlantic and northern Pacific as a show of strength to deter Russia's Western adversaries. Bronk said that at the outset of its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia was operating a fleet of 50-60 Bear-Hs and around 60 Backfires, alongside around 20 Tu-160M nuclear-capable Blackjack heavy bombers. He estimated that Russia has now lost more than 10% of the combined Bear-H and Backfire fleet, taking into account last weekend's attacks and the loss of several planes earlier in the war – one shot down and the others struck while on the ground. These losses 'will put major pressure on a key Russian force that was already operating at maximum capacity,' Bronk told Reuters. Russia's defence ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment. PROJECT DELAYS Replacing the planes will be challenging. Both the Bear H and the Backfire are aircraft that were designed in the Soviet era and have been out of production for decades, said Douglas Barrie, aerospace expert at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, although existing planes have been upgraded over the years. Barrie said that building new ones like-for-like was therefore very unlikely, and it was unclear whether Russia had any useable spare airframes of either type. Western sanctions against Russia have aimed to restrict the import of components such as microprocessors that are vital to avionics systems, although Moscow has so far been comparatively successful at finding alternative sources, Barrie added. Russia has been modernising its Blackjack bomber fleet, and Putin sent a pointed signal to the West last year by taking a 30-minute flight in one such aircraft and pronouncing it ready for service. But production of new Blackjacks is slow – one Russian military blogger this week put it at four per year – and Western experts say progress in developing Russia's next-generation PAK DA bomber has also been moving at a crawl. The Federation of American Scientists (FAS) said in a report last month that Russia had signed a contract with manufacturer Tupolev in 2013 to build the PAK DA, but cited Russian media reports as saying state test flights are not scheduled until next year, with initial production to begin in 2027. While it would be logical for Russia to try to speed up its PAK DA plans, it may not have the capacity, said Hans Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project at the FAS. He said in a telephone interview that Russia is facing delays with a range of other big defence projects including its new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile. RUSI's Bronk was also sceptical of Moscow's chances of accelerating the timeline for the next-generation bomber. 'Russia will struggle to deliver the PAK DA programme at all in the coming five years, let alone accelerate it, due to budgetary shortfalls and materials and technology constraints on industry due to sanctions,' he said.

Ukraine war ‘existential,' Kremlin says, launching revenge strikes
Ukraine war ‘existential,' Kremlin says, launching revenge strikes

The Citizen

time5 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Ukraine war ‘existential,' Kremlin says, launching revenge strikes

Kyiv hit hard as Russia launches over 400 drones and dozens of missiles, killing civilians and igniting widespread fires. A person looks out from a broken window in a residential building damaged during a Russian air strike in Kyiv on June 6, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russia carried out a barrage of drone strikes across Ukraine overnight, killing at least four people and wounding 20 in the capital Kyiv, Ukrainian officials said on June 6. (Photo by Roman PILIPEY / AFP) The Kremlin said on Friday that the Ukraine war was 'existential' for Russia, after it launched a wave of retaliatory drone and missile strikes that killed at least three in Kyiv. AFP journalists heard air raid sirens and explosions ring out over the capital throughout the night as Ukrainian air defence batteries intercepted waves of Russian drones and missiles. Kyiv announced that Russia had fired 45 missiles and 407 drones in the barrage, after Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed retaliation for an audacious Ukrainian attack on several Russian airbases. President Volodymyr Zelensky in response urged allies to 'decisively' ramp up pressure on Russia to halt the war, which has left tens of thousands dead over more than three years of fighting. 'We heard a drone — we heard it coming very close, and then there was an explosion,' Ksenia, a Kyiv resident, told AFP outside a multiple-storey housing block that was left with a charred and gaping hole. 'Our windows and window panes were blown out, but we got away with a slight shock,' she added, standing in a courtyard littered with broken glass and debris. ALSO READ: Russia signals severe retaliation after Ukraine's strikes The Kremlin on Friday cast its three-year invasion as nothing short of a battle for the 'future' of Russia. 'For us it is an existential issue, an issue on our national interest, safety, on our future and the future of our children, of our country,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, responding to US President Donald Trump's comparison of Moscow and Kyiv to brawling children. 'Act decisively' Zelensky said at least three people had been killed in the capital, and that Russia had targeted nine regions of Ukraine, including Lviv and Volyn in the west, which border EU and NATO member Poland. 'If someone does not put pressure and gives the war more time to take lives, they are complicit and responsible. We need to act decisively,' Zelensky wrote on social media. Deadly attacks have escalated in recent weeks even as the two sides hold talks aimed at ending the conflict triggered by Russia's February 2022 invasion. Cities and villages have been destroyed across eastern Ukraine and millions forced to flee their homes, with Russia's forces controlling around one-fifth of Ukraine's territory. ALSO READ: Ukraine shows it's far from finished with Russian warplanes bombing Russian aerial assaults have become larger in recent weeks as concerns build over Ukraine's strained air defence capacity. The defence ministry in Moscow said its forces had launched the 'massive' missile and drone strike in 'response' to recent attacks by Kyiv on its territory. Putin earlier this week told Trump that Moscow would retaliate over the Ukrainian attack on Sunday in which drones damaged nuclear-capable military planes at Russian air bases, including thousands of kilometres behind the front lines in Siberia. The brazen operation, 18 months in the planning, saw Kyiv smuggle more than 100 small drones into Russia, park them near Russian air bases and unleash them in a coordinated attack. Retaliation Despite several recent rounds of meetings between Ukrainian and Russian delegations, Putin has repeatedly rejected a ceasefire, and has issued a host of sweeping demands on Ukraine if it wants to halt the fighting. They include completely pulling troops out of four regions claimed by Russia, but which its army does not fully control, an end to Western military support, and a ban on Ukraine joining NATO. ALSO READ: Kremlin denies dragging out Ukraine peace talks The overnight Russian attack left multiple fires burning in various districts of the capital. Three first responders from the state emergency service were killed while dealing with an earlier strike, Interior Minister Igor Klymenko said. 'They were working under fire to help people,' he said, adding nine more were wounded and that 'doctors are fighting for their lives.' Kyiv's mayor said earlier that four were killed in the capital but later revised down that toll. Several strikes also hit the city of Lutsk and the Ternopil region in western Ukraine. At least 49 people were wounded in total, Zelensky said. ALSO READ: Zelensky says won't play Putin's 'games' with short truce Moscow meanwhile said Ukrainian strikes overnight on Russia wounded three people in the western Tula region, while Kyiv claimed to have staged successful attacks on two air fields deep inside Russian territory. Footage shared on social media showed a large fire and smoke billowing into the air at an oil facility that serves a military site in Russia's Saratov region, which has been frequently targeted. The Russian defence ministry said it downed 174 Ukrainian drones overnight. Ten downed drones were headed for the Russian capital, according to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. – By: © Agence France-Presse

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