Russia-Ukraine war: Further prisoner-of-war exchanges take place

Germany has evidence of war crimes ‘in three-digit range’, says prosecutor

Freed Ukrainian prisoners reacting following their exchange at an unknown location in Ukraine. Photograph: Photograph: Ukrainian presidential chief of staff/AFP via Getty Images
Freed Ukrainian prisoners reacting following their exchange at an unknown location in Ukraine. Photograph: Photograph: Ukrainian presidential chief of staff/AFP via Getty Images

Further prisoner-of-war exchanges have taken place between Russia and Ukraine.

The head of Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s office, Andriy Yermak, said Ukraine has got 116 soldiers back as part of a prisoner swap.

Mr Yermak posted a video of soldiers on a bus, along with them posing with flags in the snow outside. He said they were “defenders of Mariupol, Kherson partisans [and] snipers from Bakhmut vicinities”.

Earlier on Saturday, Russia said it had got 63 prisoners of war back in an exchange. The 63 were released after negotiations with Ukraine were mediated by the United Arab Emirates, Reuters reports. They include “sensitive category” people, it added.

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Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has said that the sending of more arms to Ukraine will only encourage more attacks from Russia.

“All of Ukraine that remains under Kyiv’s rule will burn,” journalist Nadana Fridrikhson quoted him as saying in a written interview with her, Reuters reports.

Elsewhere, Germany has collected evidence of war crimes in Ukraine, the country’s prosecutor general said in a newspaper interview published on Saturday, adding he saw a need for a judicial process at international level.

“Currently, for example, we are focusing on the mass killings in Bucha or attacks against Ukrainian civilian infrastructure,” Peter Frank told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

So far, prosecutors have pieces of evidence in the “three-digit range”, he added, without elaborating.

Ukraine and its western allies have accused Russian forces of committing atrocities in Bucha, a satellite town of Kyiv, soon after launching their invasion last February. Moscow has denied the charge. Russia has also targeted key infrastructure in Ukraine but denies deliberately targeting civilians.

Germany began collecting evidence in March 2022 to prosecute possible war crimes, including by interviewing Ukrainian refugees and evaluating publicly available information, Mr Frank said, adding that German prosecutors were not yet investigating specific individuals.

“We are preparing ourselves for a possible later court case – be it with us in Germany, be it with our foreign partners, be it before an international court,” he added.

Asked who should be tried, Mr Frank said Russian state leaders and those implementing decisions at the highest military level should be held accountable.

Ukraine is pushing for the creation of a special tribunal to prosecute Russian military and political leaders it holds responsible for starting the war.

The International Criminal Court has launched its own investigation into alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes days after Moscow’s February 24th invasion, but it does not have jurisdiction to prosecute aggression in Ukraine.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, who is visiting Kyiv, said on Thursday that an international centre for the prosecution of the crime of aggression in Ukraine would be set up in The Hague.

Moscow has rejected allegations by Kyiv and western nations of war crimes. The Kremlin has said it launched a “special military operation” to protect its own security. – Agencies