The Prague Post - Ukrainians beg for news of missing soldiers as prisoners return

EUR -
AED 4.241483
AFN 81.415226
ALL 99.083059
AMD 442.539341
ANG 2.066586
AOA 1058.915823
ARS 1365.216092
AUD 1.777566
AWG 2.081456
AZN 1.967677
BAM 1.964656
BBD 2.333439
BDT 141.22909
BGN 1.956142
BHD 0.435865
BIF 3397.305457
BMD 1.154761
BND 1.48433
BOB 7.986208
BRL 6.400034
BSD 1.15574
BTN 99.449166
BWP 15.534431
BYN 3.782082
BYR 22633.30624
BZD 2.321465
CAD 1.570099
CDF 3322.246441
CHF 0.936823
CLF 0.028204
CLP 1082.334399
CNY 8.283795
CNH 8.299634
COP 4787.348436
CRC 582.525957
CUC 1.154761
CUP 30.601154
CVE 110.712712
CZK 24.830862
DJF 205.224494
DKK 7.458275
DOP 68.366308
DZD 150.708249
EGP 57.436407
ERN 17.321408
ETB 155.781668
FJD 2.594459
FKP 0.849893
GBP 0.850435
GEL 3.158316
GGP 0.849893
GHS 11.865211
GIP 0.849893
GMD 81.415064
GNF 9994.452732
GTQ 8.881112
GYD 241.78996
HKD 9.064356
HNL 30.151246
HRK 7.534586
HTG 151.564547
HUF 402.83248
IDR 18802.965587
ILS 4.157502
IMP 0.849893
INR 99.452138
IQD 1512.736284
IRR 48615.418402
ISK 144.01063
JEP 0.849893
JMD 185.034112
JOD 0.818771
JPY 166.340371
KES 149.545877
KGS 100.984251
KHR 4634.009952
KMF 492.509744
KPW 1039.37367
KRW 1577.715102
KWD 0.35313
KYD 0.963066
KZT 592.777303
LAK 24925.50628
LBP 103466.543214
LKR 346.042917
LRD 230.494556
LSL 20.716844
LTL 3.409708
LVL 0.698504
LYD 6.287716
MAD 10.525069
MDL 19.791733
MGA 5173.327541
MKD 61.437773
MMK 2424.439245
MNT 4134.284532
MOP 9.343319
MRU 45.752049
MUR 52.553588
MVR 17.789131
MWK 2004.664665
MXN 21.837296
MYR 4.90254
MZN 73.847371
NAD 20.716839
NGN 1781.819016
NIO 41.922105
NOK 11.429312
NPR 159.118666
NZD 1.917174
OMR 0.444021
PAB 1.15574
PEN 4.168113
PGK 4.765124
PHP 64.873336
PKR 326.393494
PLN 4.270769
PYG 9221.649954
QAR 4.204026
RON 5.027024
RSD 117.205928
RUB 92.173543
RWF 1645.533744
SAR 4.334424
SBD 9.639237
SCR 17.052351
SDG 693.437938
SEK 10.963817
SGD 1.480259
SHP 0.90746
SLE 25.462898
SLL 24214.754265
SOS 659.949867
SRD 43.335897
STD 23901.211363
SVC 10.112586
SYP 15014.295344
SZL 20.71683
THB 37.437762
TJS 11.672418
TMT 4.041662
TND 3.074016
TOP 2.704569
TRY 45.453919
TTD 7.83733
TWD 34.135919
TZS 2996.603943
UAH 47.937898
UGX 4164.810535
USD 1.154761
UYU 47.514602
UZS 17587.003143
VES 116.579865
VND 30110.380623
VUV 138.529226
WST 3.174237
XAF 658.944562
XAG 0.031818
XAU 0.000336
XCD 3.120798
XDR 0.814957
XOF 657.059121
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.011393
ZAR 20.694237
ZMK 10394.234556
ZMW 27.939675
ZWL 371.832417
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Ukrainians beg for news of missing soldiers as prisoners return
Ukrainians beg for news of missing soldiers as prisoners return / Photo: Tetiana DZHAFAROVA - AFP

Ukrainians beg for news of missing soldiers as prisoners return

Amid the screaming sirens of ambulances bringing Ukrainian prisoners back from Russia on Thursday, Yana Nepotribna struggled to make her voice heard as she yelled out to her husband.

Text size:

Denys Nepotribna could not hear his tearful 26-year-old wife in the din.

And he was among the soldiers surprised to see the woman climb onto a two metre (6.5 feet) high wall to get a better view.

Nepotribna fell into the arms of her husband and the other former prisoners surrounded them as though forming a protective shield around their reunion. She was then carried in the crowd having nearly lost conscious in the emotion of the moment.

"I held on to him like a vulture," she told AFP. "He says he said something, but I don't remember what it was."

The couple had one of the rare happy endings from the latest return of Ukrainians from Russian captivity.

At least one other woman emerged from the crowd in tears, unable to find the soldier she had been looking for in the crowd.

- Desperate soldiers' wives -

Russia and Ukraine agreed at talks in Istanbul last week to each free more than 1,000 prisoners of war and to send back the bodies of war dead. All of those freed were wounded or aged under 25.

The first stages of the swap took place on Monday and Tuesday, with Russia on Wednesday also handing back the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian soldiers killed since Russia launched its invasion in February 2022.

The oldest Ukrainian soldier freed on Thursday was 59, the youngest 22. They included some who had been listed as "missing in action," Ukrainian ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets said.

The freed soldiers were besieged by distraught families looking for news of missing fighters.

Under the window of the building where the soldiers were taken, people held up banners with the pictures of missing soldiers. Dozens of identity pictures are also stuck to the walls. Families begged the returning troops to look at the images and shouted their names and brigade numbers hoping for news.

Wounded soldiers, some without legs and other limbs, were pushed in wheelchairs. One looked at the pictures as he moved through the crowd. "That one is alive," he said after seeing one photo.

One soldier walked through with a Ukrainian flag around his shoulders. "Mum, I am in Ukraine and I will soon be home," he shouted, in Russian, into a mobile phone.

Cries of joy and tears of sadness were passed through other phones as other soldiers made their presence known.

Iryna Melnyk said she found out during an exchange on Tuesday that her son, missing for the past two years, was alive.

"Two men told me that he was alive and in captivity," said the 44-year-old.

"I recorded them by video to show that my son is alive and that he must be saved," she added.

"I showed a photo of my son. I said: 'Look. 57th Brigade. Melnik.' And he looked at me and and recognised my son," she said.

The prisoner exchanges are one of the rare areas where the war rivals have been able to agree after more than three years of conflict that has claimed tens of thousands of lives. Ukrainian officials said more exchanges were expected in the coming days despite wrangling between the two sides.

Russian state media showed Moscow's troops in camouflage chanting "Russia, Russia" with national flags around their shoulders as they returned on Thursday.

According to a Ukrainian interior ministry estimate given in December, about 60,000 Ukrainian civilians and soldiers are considered missing in the chaos of the war.

S.Janousek--TPP