Moscow and Kyiv released 95 prisoners of war (POWs) each in an “unexpected” prisoner swap on Friday.
The deal, in which 190 POWs were released in total, was brokered by the United Arab Emirates, according to AFP news agency.
Human rights activist and journalist Maksym Butkevych said the swap was a surprise, explaining that he thought he was being transported to a different prison.
“I didn’t know, it was unexpected,” he said. “Yesterday morning, after the inspection, they told me that I was leaving in half an hour, but they didn’t tell me where. Accordingly, I packed my things because I thought I was being transported, not for an exchange. We found out about the exchange by accident on the way. It was a double surprise.”
Confirming the news, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said: “Every time Ukraine rescues its people from Russian captivity, we get closer to the day when freedom will be returned to all who are in Russian captivity.”
It comes as the National Intelligence Service (NIS) said in a statement that Russian navy ships had transferred 1,500 North Korean special operation forces to the Russian port city of Vladivostok earlier this month.
Biden and Scholz ‘discuss unlocking frozen Russian assets’ for Ukraine
Joe Biden has urged the West to sustain its support for Ukraine against Russia’s invasion as Kyiv faces a third winter of full-scale war.
Speaking to reporters before holding closed-door talks with chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin to discuss matters ranging from Ukraine to the expanding conflict in the Middle East, Mr Biden said: “As Ukraine faces a tough winter, we must, we must sustain our resolve.
“And I know the cost is heavy, but make no mistake, it bears in comparison to the cost of living in a world where aggression prevails, where large states attack and bully smaller ones simply because they can.”
He said he would discuss with Mr Scholz efforts to increase military support for Ukraine and shore up its civilian energy infrastructure “by unlocking the value of frozen Russian assets”.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 22:01
Report: Trump blames Zelensky and Biden – but not Putin – for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
Donald Trump held Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Joe Biden responsible for the Russia-Ukraine war in an interview — but made no reference to Vladimir Putin.
Two and a half years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Trump pinned the blame squarely on Zelensky and Biden for the conflict during an interview with podcaster Patrick Bet-David, which aired Thursday.
“I think Zelensky is one of the greatest salesmen I’ve ever seen,” Trump said, grumbling about how much aid the US has given Ukraine.
“And that doesn’t mean I don’t want to help them because I feel very badly for those people. But he should never have let that war start,” the former president added.
“That war’s a loser.”
Alex Croft19 October 2024 21:03
Ukraine’s former armed forces chief endorses ‘victory plan’ in first speech since his dismissal
Ukraine’s former commander-in-chief, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, on Thursday expressed his support for President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s “victory plan,” despite the tensions between the two that led to his dismissal.
“Ukraine must clearly follow the plan,” Zaluzhnyi said in his first public appearance since his appointment as ambassador to the U.K.
He told an audience at London’s Chatham House think-tank: “But this list of steps primarily concerns those countries that should ultimately be interested in stopping the war.”
Susie Blann and Hanna Arhirova have the full report:
Alex Croft19 October 2024 20:05
France open to immediate NATO invite for Ukraine, foreign minister says
Paris is open to the idea of immediately inviting Ukraine to NATO but this would be subject to talks with other allies, France’s foreign minister said.
“Regarding the invitation for Ukraine to join NATO, we are open to it and it’s a discussion that we are having with our partners,” Jean-Noel Barrot told a press conference held with his Ukrainian counterpart Andrii Sybiha.
If proven that North Korea had sent troops to support Russia in Ukraine this would represent a major escalation, Barrot added, and would prove that Moscow was struggling in the war.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 19:10
David Lammy presses Chinese foreign minister on support for Russia
David Lammy pressed his Chinese counterpart on Beijing’s support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine during talks in China’s capital the Foreign Office has said.
The Foreign Secretary was under pressure to take a tough line on a range of human rights issues with foreign minister Wang Yi when the pair met on Friday in what was Mr Lammy’s first visit to China since taking office.
A statement issued by the Foreign Office after the meeting described the encounter as “constructive”, adding that Mr Lammy raised “a number of foreign policy and security matters” including Chinese companies supplying equipment to the Russian military and the ongoing situation in the Middle East.
Human rights “were discussed”, including relating to mistreatment of Uighurs in Xinjiang, in China’s far west, and the ongoing detention of British national Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong, it added.
But the statement made no direct reference to Taiwan. Earlier in the week, China held large-scale military exercises surrounding the island which Sir Keir Starmer described as “not conducive to peace and stability”.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 18:13
Everything we know about North Korean troops joining Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
Mr Zelensky made the claim, without offering further details, a day after US deputy secretary of state Kurt Campbell said Washington and its allies were concerned by North Korea’s military support for Russia.
Read the full report from The Independent’s Alisha Rahaman Sarkar:
Alisha Rahaman Sarkar19 October 2024 17:15
‘It was unexpected’: POW describes moment he discovered he would be free
Ukrainian prisoner of war Maksym Butkevych said his release as part of a prisoner swap was “unexpected”.
The journalist and human rights activist did not know he was being released until he was already in transit, according to Ukrainian media outlet Hromadske.
“No, I didn’t know, it was unexpected,” he said.
“Yesterday morning, after the inspection, they told me that I was leaving in half an hour, but they didn’t tell me where.
“Accordingly, I packed my things because I thought I was being transported, not for an exchange. We found out about the exchange by accident on the way. It was a double surprise.”
Butkevych was made to plead guilty for allegedly firing a grenade launcher at an apartment building, and was sentenced to 13 years behind bars in what Amnesty International called a “grave miscarriage of justice”.
He was one of 95 Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) to be freed on October 18.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 16:15
Ukrainian military denies Russian advances in Chasiv Yar
Putin’s forces have not “managed to gain a foothold” in the war-town city of Chasiv Yar despite claims of Russian advances.
Anastasia Bobovnikova, a spokesperson of the operational tactical group Luhansk, told the Kyiv Independent: “I do not confirm the fact that Russian troops have managed to gain a foothold in the canal … or anywhere in the direction of Chasiv Yar.
“The overall strategic position of the city remains under the control of Ukraine.”
It comes after the crowd-sourced war-monitoring website DeepState reported on October 17 that Russian forces had made advances.
Bobovnikova explained that groups of Russian soldiers had occasionally crossed the canal and carried out assaults on Ukrainian positions, adding: “However, such manoeuvres are accompanied by significant losses for the Russians. Ukrainian forces quickly repel such attacks, pushing Russian units back.”
Alex Croft19 October 2024 15:16
The Russian military has attacked energy facilities in the Chernihiv region, according to the area’s military administration.
“The enemy continues to attack energy supply facilities. A critical infrastructure facility in Chernihiv Oblast was hit at night. The strike caused a fire, which was contained within a few hours,” said Viacheslav Chaus, the administration’s chief, according to Ukrainska Pravda.
There is as-yet no threat to electricity supply after the attack overnight on Saturday.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 14:18
Report: Putin introduces bizarre new law to tackle Russia’s declining birth rate
Putin has introduced bizarre new laws in Russia that will ban anything suggesting a child-free life is attractive.
Laws that would outlaw “propaganda” discouraging Russians from having children were overwhelmingly approved on Thursday in the first of three readings in the lower house of parliament.
The Russian president who portrays Russia as a bastion of “traditional values” locked in an existential struggle with a decadent West, has encouraged women to have at least three children to secure the demographic future of the country.
Alex Croft19 October 2024 13:19