- Former Ukrainian POW dies month after being released from Russian . . .
Serhii Dobrovolskyi, a Ukrainian soldier who had been in Russian captivity since 2023, has died just a month after his release at the end of May as part of a 1000-for-1000 prisoner swap, an official from the soldier's home region announced on June 21
- Ukrainian soldier dies after being released from Russian captivity . . .
Serhii Dobrovolskyi, a soldier from the town of Zdolbuniv in Rivne Oblast, has died after being released from Russian captivity at the end of May as part of the thousand-for-thousand prisoner exchange
- As Ukrainian POWs die in Russian prisons . . . - The Associated Press
The Associated Press interviewed relatives of 21 Ukrainian POWs who died in captivity Autopsies performed in Ukraine found that five of these POWs died of heart failure, including soldiers who were 22, 39 and 43
- Ukrainian POW from Vinnytsia dies two years after release from Russian . . .
Dmytro Shapovalov, a Ukrainian soldier from Vinnytsia Oblast who returned from Russian captivity on 26 April 2023, has died Source: Yuliia Pavliuk, Head of the Central Regional Centre of the
- Takeaways from AP report on Ukrainian POWs dying in Russian prisons
Of the more than 5,000 POWs Russia has repatriated to Ukraine, at least 206 died in captivity, including more than 50 when an explosion ripped through a Russian-controlled prison barracks, according to the Ukrainian government
- AP: Ukrainian POW Serhii Hryhoriev died in Russian prison—he is one of . . .
The case of Hryhoriev is one among at least 206 known Ukrainian POW deaths in Russian custody, based on Ukrainian government figures, AP says Another 245 are believed to have been executed on the battlefield by Russian troops
- More than 200 Ukrainian POWs have died in Russian . . . - The Independent
Of the more than 5,000 POWs Russia has repatriated to Ukraine, at least 206 died in captivity, including more than 50 when an explosion ripped through a Russian-controlled prison barracks
- Beatings, Shocks, Hunger: A Ukrainian Officers 846 Days In Russian . . .
Ihor Titovskiy following his release and return to Ukraine in September 2024 after more than two years in Russian captivity
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