Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Russia’s kidnapping of Ukrainian children under the spotlight

- Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a columnist for The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

When President Joe Biden urged world leaders not to diminish support for Ukraine, he used a phrase whose importance you may have missed. Speaking at the U.N. General Assembly, Biden charged (correctly) that Russia’s price for peace is “Ukraine’s capitulati­on, Ukraine’s territory, and Ukraine’s children.”

I’ve added italics to those last two words because of Moscow’s policy of illegally transferri­ng tens of thousands of Ukrainian children to Russia proper, or Russianocc­upied parts of Ukraine, and trying to transform them into good little Ukraine-hating Russians.

In his own speech to the United Nations, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also denounced Russia’s seizure of his country’s children as “purely a genocide.” That Russian war crime goes to the heart of why Ukraine believes it must win this war.

According to official data from the Ukrainian government, at least 19,546 children have been transferre­d illegally to Russian control since the war began. However, those numbers only include cases reported by a parent or guardian. The real figures are probably much higher, and there is no record of whether those children have been adopted or sent to Russian orphanages. Only 386 have been returned.

In a war where bombing civilians is central to Russian military strategy, no war crime seems too heinous to Moscow — from bombing schools, markets and hospitals to torture, rape and murder in Russianocc­upied cities.

Yet there is something especially evil about kidnapping children, which relates directly to Vladimir Putin’s belief that there is no such thing as a Ukrainian nationalit­y and that the state has no right to exist.

According to this thinking, deporting Ukrainian children makes sense: All Ukrainian youngsters should ultimately be “reeducated” to love the Russian motherland and despise the Ukrainian “Nazis.”

“Forced deportatio­n and adoption of Ukrainian children is one of the elements of a war of genocide,” Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin told me when I visited Kyiv in July. “This is a matter of intentiona­l policy.”

That is why the Internatio­nal Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Putin and his commission­er for children’s rights, Maria Lvova-belova, alleging their responsibi­lity for the war crime of unlawful deportatio­n of children from occupied areas of Ukraine.

Russia has weaponized food (blocking Ukrainian grain exports) and energy (making threats to the Zaporizhzh­ia Nuclear Power Plant, which it occupies), as Zelenskyy pointed out. It has also weaponized ecology, blowing up the Nova Kakhovka dam, which flooded cities, farmlands and animal life. As if this was insufficie­nt, Putin has even weaponized Ukrainian kids.

During the Russian destructio­n and occupation of Mariupol and other cities, many thousands of children from orphanages, boarding schools, shelters and hospitals were taken to Russian-controlled areas, even though they might have had family members elsewhere in Ukraine. Children weren’t allowed to call friends or relatives, who had no way to find them. Phones were taken away. Young children were put up for adoption.

Often, children were in shelters because their families had been killed by Russian bombing, as in Mariupol, where Russia flattened the city and refused to permit a humanitari­an corridor to let civilians exit.

Moscow has made propaganda out of kidnapped children, filming youngsters being given toys and candy and being “happily” adopted. “Children are a sacred cause. We took them out of the conflict zone, saving their lives and health,” said the utterly cynical Putin in June. Naturally, he never mentions that most of the children were displaced or orphaned by Russian bombs.

A recent documentar­y called “Uprooted,” produced by the Kyiv Independen­t newspaper and available on Youtube, interviews some of the few children who were rescued by incredibly brave relatives or guardians.

Valentina Yermachkov­a was a 19-yearold student in Dnipro when the war started. Her mother and brother were killed by a Russian shell as they sought food after the Russians invaded Mariupol. Her two younger sisters were moved to a hospital in occupied Donetsk, but not allowed to contact relatives. Fourteen-year-old Sofiia hid her brother’s phone and eventually managed to sneak a call to her older sister.

Yermachkov­a, on her own, took buses through Poland, Lithuania, across Russia and back into occupied Donetsk to retrieve her siblings. “I was afraid, but I knew I had no choice,” she told me when I met her and her sisters. “Now I realize I might have gotten stuck there, too.” She now studies law in the hopes she can work on efforts to rescue other Ukrainian kids.

Whether Ukraine can retrieve its stolen children is a huge question mark, and U.S. officials should offer any help requested. But public focus on the issue is rightly aimed at those leaders worldwide, and in this country, who still seek to shake Putin’s hand.

 ?? OLIVIER MATTHYS / AP IMAGES FOR AVAAZ.ORG (2022) ?? Ukrainian refugees placed thousands of teddy bears and toys in front of the European Commission in Brussels to highlight the reported abduction of thousands of Ukrainian children by Russia.
OLIVIER MATTHYS / AP IMAGES FOR AVAAZ.ORG (2022) Ukrainian refugees placed thousands of teddy bears and toys in front of the European Commission in Brussels to highlight the reported abduction of thousands of Ukrainian children by Russia.

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