Copyright © 2021 Euromaidanpress.com

The work of Euromaidan Press is supported by the International Renaissance Foundation

When referencing our materials, please include an active hyperlink to the Euromaidan Press material and a maximum 500-character extract of the story. To reprint anything longer, written permission must be acquired from [email protected].

Privacy and Cookie Policies.

Ukraine may swap its 74 hostages in occupied Donbas before New Year

prisoner swap
Prisoner swap at the contact line behind the bridge near the town of Schastya in 2015. Photograph: FB iryna.gerashchenko
After 15 months without prisoner swaps, Ukraine may finally exchange 74 of its citizens who are being held captive in the occupied territories of East-Ukrainian Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts by the so-called LNR and DNR, Russian-run self-styled Luhansk and Donetsk “people’s republics,” before New Year comes. In exchange, Ukraine is going to release and hand over 306 separatists.

The prisoner swap process had been de-facto blocked by Russia for 15 months. The last exchange took place on 17 September 2016, when Ukrainian nationals Volodymyr Zhemchuhov and UN mission employee Yurii Suprun were released from captivity.

Later the Trilateral Contact Group (TCG) on Donbas settlement discussed swaps for more than a year, however, no real exchange has been ever agreed since then.

In September 2017, Ukraine was ready to release 309 prisoners in exchange for 87 Ukrainian hostages in the Donbas.

306 for 74

Member of the Minsk Trilateral Contact Group’s humanitarian subgroup, MP Iryna Herashchenko informed that 162 Ukrainians had been held captive in occupied Donbas as of November 24. The whereabouts of 94 of them were established.

Later on 4 November, Herashchenko announced the prisoner exchange of 74 Ukrainian hostages taken by “LNR/DNR” for 306 persons held in Ukrainian prisons. According to Iryna Herashchenko, Ukraine’s representative in the humanitarian subgroup of the TCG, this may be the most extensive prisoner swap if it succeeds.

On 15 November Russian media reported that Viktor Medvedchuk, who represents Ukraine in TCG, asked his crony, Russian president Vladimir Putin to use his “authority and to show compassion by asking the heads of the unrecognized republics – Mr.Zakharchenko and Mr.Plotnitsky – to go ahead with this exchange as the first stage of an ”all for all“ exchange and to release these individuals [74 Ukrainian prisoners].”

According to the Russian presidential executive office, Putin replied to him: “I will do all I can and speak with the leadership of the Donetsk and Luhansk republics.” Later he reportedly called the two Moscow-installed leaders for the first time ever and of course obtained their consent.

Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov stated:

“We have no leverage to put pressure on these unrecognized republics. We have no opportunity to give instructions to anyone there, because these republics live their own lives. But the president has never made a secret of his ability to address them with calls and to cause certain influence – not infinite, of course. Only to a certain extent.”

Given that Medvedchuk has personal ties with Putin who is the godfather of his daughter and that Russia has full military and political control of the two pseudo-states in the east of Ukraine, the staged show looked like another Kremlin effort to promote Medvedchuk among Ukrainians as an influential person who is capable of having sway with Putin.

Read also: Russian “siloviki” oversee power vertical of occupied Donbas

map of ORDLO
A map of the occupied territories of the Donbas. Image: Euromaidan Press

At any rate, following the Putin’s call, Igor Plotnitsky allowed the seven Ukrainian military prisoners-of-war to call home for the first time for many months.

“LNR coup” won’t affect the agreements

Several days after the latest prisoner swap was announced, a coup took place in Luhansk on 20-23 November. So-called “head of LNR” Igor Plotnitsky, one of the signees of Minsk agreements, was replaced by his “security minister” Leonid Pasechnik.

Nevertheless, Pasechnik assured that the change of power in Luhansk would not affect the prisoner exchange. Moreover, an official “LNR” website announced that Plotnitsky had been named the “LNR” representative to the Minsk process, aimed at resolving the conflict.

On 29 November Special Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office to the TCG, Ambassador Martin Sajdik said that the TCG confirmed the readiness of conflicting parties for an exchange of captives. Viktor Medvedchuk told reporters in Minsk after the meeting of the Contact Group:

“Our goal is to release these 306 [prisoners] before the New Year and Christmas holidays, as was stated. Preparations now remain to be done [by the Ukrainian side],” he said.

According to Medvedchuk, the 306-to-74 exchange is the first stage of the prisoner exchange in the all-for-all format. As it succeeds, the second stage will be prepared, at which Ukraine will free and transfer the remaining 80 prisoners and receive the remaining 20 people.

Russia’s negotiator in TCG Boris Gryzlov said it was very difficult to organize prisoner swap in the all-for-all format due to the problems with verification as the prisoners are at various stages of the procedure. “A number of persons are at various stages of the procedure: some are with verdicts delivered, some are at the stage of the investigation, some are simply detained,” he told TASS.

Martin Sajdik noted that the date of the exchange was expected to be agreed at the TCG meeting on 5 December. However, the parties discussed only some technical matters relating to the prisoner exchange. “The sides have not determined the date of exchange yet but promised it would be done before the New Year and Christmas celebrations,” he said.

The Trilateral Contact Group will reconvene in the Belarusian capital Minsk on 20 December for the last time this year.

Not just military

Not just Ukrainian military prisoners-of-war are held hostage in occupied Luhansk and Donetsk. Among the prisoners, there are many civilians such as Luhansk football fans Vlad Ovcharenko and Artem Akhmerov sentenced to 13 and 17 years in prison for “high treason in the form of espionage”, Donetsk journalist Stanislav Asieiev, Luhansk blogger Eduard Nedeliaiev, 63-year-old religious specialist and academic Ihor Kozlovskyy, a civic activist Volodymyr Fomichov who was captured as he visited his relatives in the occupied zone, three civil volunteers.

Ukrainian envoy to TCG Iryna Herashchenko highlighted that there are 10 women among the Ukrainian hostages held in the Donbas.

Read also: Ukrainian civil resistance to Russian occupation in Donbas

Many of the prisoners have been behind bars for over a year, some are illegally held for three years.

As of September 2017, 410 persons were considered missing in the ATO zone, according to the SBU’s the Joint Center for Coordination of Search, Release of Captives, Hostages, and Location of Missing Persons in the ATO Area. Since 7 April 2014, 3,138 hostages were released and exchanged.

  • Russia has been officially denying any involvement in the war in the Donbas region.
  • The Trilateral Contact Group on Ukraine was created after the May 2014 Ukrainian presidential election as means to facilitate a diplomatic resolution to the war in the Donbas.
  •  The TCG consists of representatives from Ukraine, Russia and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
  • Prisoner exchanges in the all-for-all format are one of the provisions of the Minsk-2, the Package of Measures on the implementation of the Minsk agreements was signed by TCG on 12 February 2014 in Belarus.

Read more:

You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this.  We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. A little bit goes a long way: for as little as the cost of one cup of coffee a month, you can help build bridges between Ukraine and the rest of the world, plus become a co-creator and vote for topics we should cover next. Become a patron or see other ways to support. Become a Patron!
Total
0
Shares
Related Posts