Wed 15 February 2023:
At least 6,000 children from the war-torn Ukraine have been held in a vast network of camps run by the Russian government, according to a report by Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL). According to the data, there are at least 43 such institutions, along with their locations.
One of the goals of the network has been described as “re-education,” which aims to purportedly influence children’s political and personal attitudes to be more pro-Russian. Aside from those in Siberia and along the far eastern Pacific coast of Russia, the facilities have been found in Crimea and on the Russian mainland.
The children are believed to be staying in the state-operated facilities over the past year. Segmented into four categories, children deemed orphans, those who were under the care of the Ukrainian state institutions before the war began, whose custody is unclear amid the conflict, and those who have clear familial guardianship are found to be staying in these facilities.
While those who have clear guardianship have been targeted for “re-education”, children – deemed orphans – have been targeted for
“deportation to the Russian territory or for adoption or foster care”, the study claims. “At least 32 (78 per cent) of the camps identified by Yale HRL appear engaged in systematic re-education efforts that expose children from Ukraine to Russia-centric academic, cultural, patriotic, and/or military education,” the HRL study underlines. “Multiple camps endorsed by the Russian Federation are advertised as ‘integration programs’, with the apparent goal of integrating children from Ukraine into the Russian government’s vision of national culture, history, and society,” it further stresses.
In 10 per cent of these camps, the return of children to Ukraine was allegedly delayed. Some parents have been reported as saying that they were unable to get information about their children.
The program involves every level of the Russian government, according to the Yale investigation, which stresses that “dozens of federal, regional, and local figures (are) directly engaged in operating and politically justifying the program”. Medical care of the children in the war-torn country has also been cited as one of the reasons for the transport.
“Giving (Ukraine’s children Russian) nationality or having them adopted goes against the fundamental principles of child protection in situations of war. This is something that is happening in Russia and must not happen,” Filippo Grande, UN High Commissioner for Refugees,
Last year, United Nations officials raised the issue. In June, the former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, told the Security Council that the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) was investigating alleged plans for the forcible deportation of Ukraine’s children to Russia, “which do not appear to include steps for family reunification”.
SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES
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