Most of people released in prisoner-of-war swap on 14 September were held captive since early days of war – photo, videos
The vast majority of people released as part of the prisoner-of-war (POW) swap on Saturday, 14 September, had been held in Russian captivity since the early days of the full-scale war. Source: Ukraine's Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinets on Telegram Soldiers released from Russian captivity.
The vast majority of people released as part of the prisoner-of-war (POW) swap on Saturday, 14 September, had been held in Russian captivity since the early days of the full-scale war.
Source: Ukraine's Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinets on Telegram
Quote: "82 privates and sergeants. 21 officers. Defenders of Mariupol, Azovstal [Steelworks] and Kyiv, Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kharkiv oblasts.
Among those released are defenders from the 36th Marine Brigade, the National Guard, particularly the 12th Azov Special Forces Brigade, border guards, and the Kraken Special Forces Unit officers. There are also officers from the National Police and the Territorial Defence Forces, the State Emergency Service, and Armed Forces units.
The vast majority of those released are people who had been held captive since the early days of the war."
Details: Lubinets added that since the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion, 57 POW exchanges have been carried out and 3,672 Ukrainians have been liberated.
Background:
- On Saturday, 14 September, 103 soldiers were released from Russian captivity as part of a POW swap.
- Among those released are 38 officers from Ukraine's National Guard. The swap also included 28 Ukrainian servicemen: two from the Kraken special unit, two from the International Legion, three from the Special Operations Forces and one from the Territorial Defence Forces. Azov reported that 23 of its fighters had been released.
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