Accessibility links

Breaking News

Scores of Ukrainian and Russian prisoners head back home after swap


Ukrainian serviceman Yevhen Liashenko hugs his wife, Kateryna, after returning from captivity during a prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine, in Ukraine, Dec. 30, 2024.
Ukrainian serviceman Yevhen Liashenko hugs his wife, Kateryna, after returning from captivity during a prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine, in Ukraine, Dec. 30, 2024.

Ukraine and Russia carried out a new exchange of prisoners of war on Monday, with the two sides bringing home a combined total of more than 300 former captives.

Kyiv brought home 189 former captives, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russia's Defense Ministry said, while the Russian ministry said 150 Russian servicemen were returning home.

The Russian ministry said the captives had been released in Belarus, Moscow's close ally in the 34-month-old war with Ukraine, and would be transferred to Russia.

Reuters Television footage in Ukraine showed waiting spouses and some servicemen, many wrapped in blue and yellow national flags, weeping openly as they were reunited well after dark outside a building.

A child's incredulous voice resounded over a mobile telephone: "Dad, is that you?"

"My son is 5 years old now. The last time I saw him, he was 2 years old," said Serhii, who was captured by Russian forces at the Azovstal steel mill in the southern port of Mariupol, which withstood a siege for nearly three months in 2022.

"That's why my son probably didn't recognize me. I used to have a beard and hair. I lost 20 kgā€ [44 pounds].

For some former captives, the return to freedom involved adjustment.

"Even now, I'm holding my hands behind my back. It has become a habit of mine," said journalist Roman Borshch, 29. "Now, I have to get used to being a free person again."

Video posted by the Russian Defense Ministry showed smiling servicemen on a bus, some calling their families.

"We'll soon be home. How are the children? How is our boy?" one man said.

"I am overwhelmed by emotion," said another. "I still can't quite believe that this has happened, that I am back home, that the ministry made such efforts, that we are remembered and valued."

Ukrainian servicemen of the Azov Brigade hug each other after returning from captivity during a prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine, in Ukraine, Dec. 30, 2024.
Ukrainian servicemen of the Azov Brigade hug each other after returning from captivity during a prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine, in Ukraine, Dec. 30, 2024.

Zelenskyy thanked United Arab Emirates authorities and other partners for facilitating the swap. The UAE acknowledged it helped arrange the exchange.

"The return of our people from Russian captivity is always very good news for each of us. And today is one of such days: our team managed to bring 189 Ukrainians home," Zelenskyy said on Telegram.

There was no immediate explanation for why more Ukrainians than Russians were listed as released. The freed Ukrainians included civilians who had been in Russian captivity.

Zelenskyy said the returning Ukrainians included soldiers, sergeants and officers from front-line areas, and two civilians who had been captured in Mariupol.

Denys Prokopenko, commander of the 12th Special Forces Azov Brigade that defended the Azovstal mill, said 11 of his men were among those returning. Prokopenko was brought home in an earlier swap.

The Ukrainian body overseeing prisoner swaps said it was the 59th exchange between the two sides since Russia's February 2022 invasion of its smaller neighbor. The swap brought to 3,956 the number of Ukrainian detainees brought home.

It said those brought home this year included Ukrainian nationals serving what it described as "so-called sentences" imposed by Russian courts for various offenses.

In the last swap in October, also carried out with assistance from the United Arab Emirates, Russia and Ukraine each brought home 95 detainees.

  • 16x9 Image

    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

ā€‹
XS
SM
MD
LG