Kremlin says Russia is still ready for prisoner swap with Ukraine despite problems
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on June 9, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on June 9, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
Russia is committed to a prisoner swap with Ukraine despite accusations of delays. The exchange involves 1,200 POWs and repatriation of deceased soldiers.
MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said on Monday that Russia was still ready to honour agreements with Ukraine on a new prisoner of war exchange and on the repatriation of dead soldiers despite what it said was Kyiv's failure to so far honour its side of the bargain.
Russia accused Ukraine on Saturday of indefinitely postponing the exchanges, something Kyiv denied.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Monday repeated Russian accusations against Ukraine.
"We have seen and heard a hundred different excuses, justifications and so on, but it is difficult to view them as credible," Peskov told reporters.
"The Russian side remains ready to implement the agreements reached in Istanbul."
The exchanges were agreed to during a second round of direct peace talks in Istanbul on June 2 and are meant to see a new prisoner of war swap of at least 1,200 POWs - focusing on the youngest and most severely wounded - as well as the repatriation of thousands of bodies of those killed in the war.
The return of prisoners of war and the return of the bodies of the dead is one of the few things the two sides had been able to agree on, even as their broader negotiations have failed to get close to ending the war, now in its fourth year.
Kremlin aide Vladimir Medinsky said on Saturday that the Russian side had shown up at the agreed exchange point with the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian dead soldiers only to find nobody from Ukraine to take them. He said a first list of 640 POWs had also been handed to Ukraine in order to begin the exchange.
Ukrainian officials rejected those accusations and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy vowed on Sunday to press on with prisoner exchanges despite tensions around the issue.
He said though that Ukraine had not yet received a full list of prisoners to be released and accused Moscow of "trying to play some kind of dirty political and information game."
(Reporting by Dmitry Antonov; Writing by Lucy PapachristouEditing by Andrew Osborn)
The Kremlin stated that Russia remains ready to honor agreements with Ukraine for a new prisoner of war exchange and the repatriation of dead soldiers.
Russia accused Ukraine of indefinitely postponing the prisoner exchanges, which Ukraine denied.
Dmitry Peskov mentioned that Russia has heard numerous excuses from Ukraine but finds them difficult to view as credible.
Russia claimed to have brought the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian dead soldiers to the agreed exchange point but found no one from Ukraine there.
President Zelenskiy vowed to continue with prisoner exchanges despite the tensions and mentioned that Ukraine had not yet received a full list of prisoners to be released.
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