Current:Home > MarketsA teenager taken from occupied Mariupol to Russia will return to Ukraine, officials say -Trailblazer Capital Learning
A teenager taken from occupied Mariupol to Russia will return to Ukraine, officials say
View
Date:2025-04-13 22:11:13
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Ukrainian and Russian officials on Friday reported reaching an agreement to bring a Ukrainian teenager taken to Russia amid the war last year back to his home country, in accordance with his wishes.
Bohdan Yermokhin, a 17-year-old whose parents passed away years ago, will be reunited with a cousin “in a third country” on his 18th birthday later this month, with a view to then return to Ukraine, Russian children’s rights ombudswoman Maria Lvova-Belova said in an online statement Friday. Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets also confirmed on Friday that Yermokhin “will soon be in Ukraine.”
Yermokhin is one of thousands of Ukrainian children taken to Russia from Ukrainian regions occupied since the Feb. 24, 2022, invasion, an effort that has prompted the International Criminal Court to issue arrest warrants for President Vladimir Putin and Lvova-Belova. Judges at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, said they found “reasonable grounds to believe” the two were responsible for war crimes, including the illegal deportation and transfer of children from occupied Ukrainian regions to Russia — something an AP investigation detailed earlier this year.
The Kremlin has dismissed the warrants as null and void, insisting that Russia doesn’t recognize the jurisdiction of the ICC. Lvova-Belova has argued that the children were taken to Russia for their safety, not abducted — a claim widely rejected by the international community.
Yermokhin was taken to Russia from the port city of Mariupol, seized by Moscow’s forces early on in the war. He was placed in a foster family in the Moscow region and given Russian citizenship, but repeatedly expressed the desire to return to Ukraine, according to Kateryna Bobrovska, a Ukrainian lawyer who represents the teenager and his cousin, 26-year-old Valeria Yermokhina, his legal guardian in Ukraine.
The teenager apparently even tried to get to his home country on his own: in April Lvova-Belova told reporters that the Russian authorities caught Yerkmohin near Russia’s border with Belarus, as he was heading to Ukraine. The children’s rights ombudswoman argued that he was being taken there “under false pretenses.”
Lvova-Belova said Friday that in August, her office offered Yermokhin the option of returning to Ukraine, but he “clearly stated that he doesn’t plan to move to Ukraine before turning 18 and confirmed it in writing.” He later changed his mind, she said, and an agreement with Ukraine regarding his return was reached.
Last month, Lubinets said in his Telegram channel that a total of 386 children have been brought back to Ukraine from Russia. “Ukraine will work until it returns everyone to their homeland,” Lubinets stressed.
Lawyer Bobrovska told The Associated Press in a phone interview that Yermokhin tells her “daily that he dreams about getting to Ukraine, to his relatives.”
“Bohdan is happy that things have moved along, and now he lives in anticipation of leaving for a third country, where he will turn 18, and then end up in his native Ukraine,” she said.
According to her, time is of the essence: Yermokhin’s birthday is on Nov. 19, and turning 18 makes him eligible for conscription into the Russian army. He has already received two summonses from a military enlistment office to appear in December, Bobrovska said, and there’s a “real threat” that he may be drafted.
Lvova-Belova in her Friday statement said that Yermokhin was only being summoned for record-keeping purposes and rejected claims that the teenager could be conscripted, saying that as a college student, he had a deferment.
Bobrovska in conversation with the AP, expressed hope that “success in Bohdan’s case will allow other Ukrainian children in a similar situation to press for returning to Ukraine.”
veryGood! (15618)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Quaker Oats recall expanded, granola bar added: See the updated recall list
- Adrian Beltré to have Rangers logo on baseball Hall of Fame plaque. No team emblem for Jim Leyland
- Recently discharged patient shoots, wounds security officer at Kansas City hospital
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Delta and Amex hike credit card fees while enhancing perks. Here's what to know.
- NCAA men's tournament Bracketology: North Carolina hanging onto top seed by a thread
- Your appendix is not, in fact, useless. This anatomy professor explains
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Did the Georgia groundhog see his shadow? General Beauregard Lee declares early spring
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- 'Barbie' music producer Mark Ronson opens up about the film's 'bespoke' sound
- Carl Weathers, linebacker-turned-actor who starred in 'Rocky' movies, dies at 76
- NHL players will be in next two Winter Olympics; four-nation tournament announced for 2025
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- The Taliban vowed to cut ties with al Qaeda, but the terror group appears to be growing in Afghanistan
- NPR's Student Podcast Challenge is back – with a fourth-grade edition!
- Did the groundhog see his shadow? See results of Punxsutawney Phil's 2024 winter forecast
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
The Best Amazon Products With 100,000+ Five-Star Ratings
Groundhog Day 2024: Trademark, bankruptcy, and the dollar that failed
The Daily Money: All about tax brackets
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Tennessee plans only one year of extra federal summer food aid program for kids
Hamas considers hostage, prisoner deal; Israeli military turns toward Rafah: Live updates
News website The Messenger shuts down after 8 months. See more 2024 media layoffs.