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UK announces new sanctions against those involved in deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia

Tuesday, 19 November 2024, 13:30
UK announces new sanctions against those involved in deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia
Stock photo: Getty Images

The United Kingdom has imposed sanctions on a number of individuals involved in the forced deportation and "re-education" of Ukrainian children by Russia from the temporarily-occupied territories.

Source: the UK government’s press office, as reported by European Pravda

Details: A group of 10 individuals connected to the implementation of Russia's policy of forcibly deporting and re-educating Ukrainian children from the occupied oblasts have been targeted by the sanctions. The package was timed to mark the 1,000th day of the full-scale war.

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The statement highlighted that over 19,500 Ukrainian minors have been forcibly taken to Russia or deeper into the occupied territories and about 6,000 of them have gone through "re-education" institutions.

Quote: "Russian authorities expose Ukrainian children to a curriculum that rewrites Russian and Ukrainian history, glorifies Russian military actions, and promotes allegiance to Russia – and in some cases involves military training." 

"No child should ever be used as a pawn in war, yet President [sic] Putin’s targeting of Ukrainian children shows the depths he will go to in his mission to erase Ukraine and its people from the map," Foreign Secretary David Lammy said. 

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Sanctions have been imposed on the Yunarmia organisation, Nikita Nagorny, Igor Kazarezov, Andrey Sabinov, Serafim Ivanov, the Avangard organisation, Valentina Lavrik; Tetyana Zavalska, who is the appointed head of an orphanage in Kherson, where 46 children were taken to Russia for adoption; and Vitaliy Suk, the appointed head of an institution for children with disabilities in Oleshky.

Background:

  • The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Kremlin ruler Putin and Russia’s Commissioner for Children’s Rights Maria Lvova-Belova in March 2023. They are suspected of committing war crimes during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Similar charges may potentially be brought against Belarus' self-proclaimed president Alexander Lukashenko.

  • At the end of October, a conference was held in Canada focusing on the Peace Formula section regarding the release of prisoners of war and the release of Ukrainians deported to Russia.

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