The Day

They are just kids

-

This appeared in the Washington Post:

One of the most appalling consequenc­es of Russia’s war in Ukraine is the suffering of Ukraine’s children. Aside from the death and destructio­n they have experience­d, a new report documents a different trauma: the systematic transfer of Ukrainian children for “reeducatio­n” in Russia, in what amounts to cultural brainwashi­ng. This could be a war crime.

Previously, Ukrainian officials have expressed concern about this practice, but the scope was unclear. Daria Herasymchu­k, Ukraine’s top children’s rights official, estimated that nearly 11,000 Ukrainian children had been taken by Russia without their parents. The Post reported in December that Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a decree easing procedures for adoption of Ukrainian children and that the policy is being “vigorously pursued” by Russia’s children’s rights commission­er, Maria Lvova-Belova, who advocates stripping children of their Ukrainian identities. She has been sanctioned by the United States.

Now, the Humanitari­an Research Lab of Yale University’s School of Public Health, part of the Conflict Observator­y supported by the State Department to document war crimes and atrocities in Ukraine, reports that Russia has transferre­d from Ukraine at least 6,000 children, ages four months to 17 years old, and the total “is likely significan­tly higher.” The report shows that at least 43 facilities hold these children; all but two of them were preexistin­g summer camps in Russian-occupied Crimea and in Russia.

The “primary purpose” of this archipelag­o of camps “appears to be political reeducatio­n,” the group concluded. Thirty-two of them “appear engaged in systematic reeducatio­n efforts that expose children from Ukraine to Russian-centric academic, cultural, patriotic, and/or military education.”

The report found that many children with known family guardiansh­ip were taken to camps with the consent of their parents, who thought the kids would get a free vacation, or at least be removed from the war zone, and they were returned as planned. But there were also cases in which children were held for months or weeks longer than planned, and two camps from which returns were suspended indefinite­ly.

Ultimately, internatio­nal courts or tribunals will have to render judgment. But Ukraine’s allies, the United States and Europe, could take action now against officials in Russia carrying out the transfers. The report says at least 12 of them are not on U.S. and/or internatio­nal sanctions lists. They should be, soon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States