Ukraine has recovered the bodies of 1,200 more deceased citizens from Russia, some of whom are believed to be fallen Ukrainian defenders, according to the Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War (POW).

“As a result of the repatriation measures, the bodies of 1,200 deceased have been returned to Ukraine,” the statement shared via Telegram said.

The Russian side confirmed that the bodies belong to Ukrainian citizens, including military personnel. The repatriation took place under agreements reached in Istanbul.

In early June, Kyiv and Moscow reached an agreement to return the bodies of 6,000 fallen soldiers from each side, according to Ukrainian officials.

The deal followed a second round of peace talks in Turkey, where Ukrainian and Russian delegations discussed key humanitarian issues, including POW exchanges, the return of deported Ukrainian children, and the groundwork for a possible ceasefire.

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This return was made possible through the joint efforts of the Coordination Headquarters, the Security Service of Ukraine, the Armed Forces, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Office of the Commissioner for Human Rights, the Secretariat of the Commissioner for Missing Persons, the State Emergency Service, and other Ukrainian security and defense bodies.

Law enforcement investigators, together with experts from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, will now carry out examinations and identification of the returned bodies.

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‘You Will Be Left to Suffer and Die’: Rutte Warns Young Russians Against Fighting in Ukraine

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte issued a stark appeal to young Russians not to fight in the war in Ukraine, saying they will be sent to the front with poor training, bad equipment and a high chance of being killed, wounded or abandoned. He backed his warning with NATO estimates that Russia is losing more than 30,000 soldiers a month – more in a single month than the Soviet Union lost during its entire 10-year war in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

The Coordination Headquarters expressed gratitude to the International Committee of the Red Cross for its assistance and thanked the Ukrainian military for organizing the transportation and transfer of the deceased to forensic authorities and specialized state institutions.

Ukraine regularly carries out exchanges of fallen soldiers with Russia. The most recent transfer was on June 11, when the bodies of 1,212 fallen Ukrainian defenders were returned, including soldiers who had fought in Russia’s Kursk Oblast.

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The previous transfer, in mid-May, involved the return of 909 bodies. Many of the fallen were soldiers who died in some of the war’s fiercest battles, including those in Kurakhove, Pokrovsk, Bakhmut, Vuhledar, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, Sumy, and Kharkiv. Some of the bodies had been held in morgues on Russian territory.

Before that, another exchange of 909 bodies occurred in mid-April. That repatriation marked at least the eighth time since October that Ukraine had recovered 500 or more fallen soldiers in a single transfer. A similar exchange also took place on March 28.

Unlike Ukraine, Russia does not publicly report the return of its fallen soldiers and has not updated its official casualty figures since late 2022, when it claimed that fewer than 6,000 Russian troops had been killed.

An ongoing investigation by Mediazona and BBC News Russian has confirmed the identities of approximately 100,000 Russian soldiers killed, based on open-source data.

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