December 27, 2017 (KyivPost) In the first prisoners of war
exchange in over a year, 74 of 168 Ukrainian soldiers having been held in
captivity in the Russian-controlled Donbas are coming home. Ukraine and Russian-backed
separatists exchanged prisoners of war on Dec. 27 with Ukrainian side having
released 237 prisoners. The exchange took place at the
military checkpoint Mayorske near Horlivka, a city in Donetsk Oblast, some
750 kilometers southeast from Kyiv. This is the first prisoner exchange
between Kyiv and the Russian-led forces in more than a year. According to Ukrainian President
Petro Poroshenko, all 74 Ukrainian prisoners are already on the territory
controlled by the Ukrainian government. They are heading to the Boryspil
airport in Kyiv’s suburbs, where they are to arrive at about 7.30 p.m. Kyiv
time. Every liberated Ukrainian would get
proper medical assistance immediately after arrival, and they with their
families will receive money aid to speed up the adaptation
at home.
The Ukrainian side handed over 237
prisoners despite the promise to release 306: 29 prisoners brought to the
exchange point refused to go back to the separatists’-controlled side, while 40
who had already served their sentence and were released did not show up for the
swap, according to Viktor Medvedchuk, a representative from the Ukrainian side,
the leader of the pro-Russian movement Ukrainian Choice – People’s Right. Ukrainian representatives involved
in the exchange process went to the Donbas on Dec. 26: Ukrainian Parliamentary
Human Rights Commissioner Valeriya Lutkovska, employees of Prosecutor General’s
office and Defence Ministry as well as several experts from a
humanitarian subgroup that takes part in Minks negotiations.While Poroshenko is thanking the
Normandy format, the United States, the Trilateral Contact Group, the OSCE and
the other international organizations for the swap, representative of
separatists Olga Kobtseva thanked Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“We hope it will continue, for
not all held captives are released, from neither side,”
said Kobtseva, who keeps communication from the Russian-baked forces
concerning humanitarian issues.The Kremlin said Russian President
Vladimir Putin on Nov. 15 called Oleksandr Zakharchenko, the
Russian-backed leader of the occupied part of Donetsk Oblast, and Ihor
Plotnitsky, who until recently commanded the Kremlin-backed forces in Luhansk,
to say he favored a prisoner swap with Kyiv. Currently, there are at least 386
Russian-led fighters in prison on Ukrainian territory, and 168 Ukrainians being
captive in the Russian-occupied parts of the Donbas. After the
swap, there will be 94 Ukrainian left in the Russian custody. According to Security Service of
Ukraine, or SBU, at least 3,140 Ukrainians have been found and released
from the Russian-occupied parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts in the last
three years.