Diplomats from the EU, Canada, and Ukraine advocate for action regarding deported Ukrainian children in a formal setting.
Diplomats from the EU, Canada, and Ukraine advocate for action regarding deported Ukrainian children in a formal setting.
Image generated by AI

Envoys urge international action for deported Ukrainian children

Image generated by AI

Envoys from the European Union, Canada and Ukraine called on the international community to address the deportation of more than 20,000 Ukrainian children by Russia. The appeal came in a joint op-ed published on Monday. They highlighted systematic violations of children's rights and the need for global cooperation.

The envoys, including EU Ambassador Ugo Astuto, Canadian Ambassador Philippe Lafortune and Ukrainian Chargé d'Affaires Andrii Vieshkin, issued the appeal through Yonhap News Agency. They noted that Ukraine's Ministry of Justice has confirmed over 20,000 cases of deportation or forced transfer to Russia or Russian-controlled territory. The practice began after the 2014 occupation of Crimea and has continued since Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022.

Tracing the children remains extremely difficult, the envoys said, because Russia has not provided relevant information. International cooperation is essential, they added, as no country can address the issue alone. The International Coalition for the Return of Ukrainian Children, launched in February 2024, now includes 49 members.

A high-level meeting of the coalition was held in Brussels on May 11. More than 2,130 children have been returned so far through related efforts. A ministerial conference is scheduled for Toronto on September 28-29, co-hosted by Canada, Ukraine and Norway. South Korea has not joined the coalition.

What people are saying

Discussions on X focus on calls for returning over 20,000 deported Ukrainian children, with envoys from EU, Canada and Ukraine urging global action. Reactions include official statements emphasizing accountability, high-engagement summaries of red lines in peace talks, and skeptical comments questioning Ukraine's return requests. Diverse views from journalists, officials and users stress children's rights and justice.

Related Articles

News illustration depicting public concern from a Cadem poll on irregular entry of Haitian children and potential child trafficking.
Image generated by AI

Cadem poll reveals concern over irregular entry of Haitian children

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

A new edition of the Cadem Plaza Pública poll shows that 85% consider the irregular entry of Haitian children serious and 58% believe it involves child trafficking.

In the latest development concerning two North Korean soldiers captured by Ukraine last year while fighting for Russia, South Korea's National Human Rights Commission on Monday urged Foreign Minister Cho Hyun and Prime Minister Kim Min-seok to expedite their transfer to South Korea. The POWs, detained since early 2025 in the Kursk region, have repeatedly expressed defection wishes in interviews.

Reported by AI

Mayors from communes including Independencia, La Pintana and Estación Central reported finding several Haitian minors after a Contraloría pre-report detected traceability issues in 105 family reunification cases.

The National Prosecutor's Office announced on Monday an ex officio investigation into the entry of Haitian children to Chile in 2025 through family reunification. Former National Migration Service director Luis Eduardo Thayer defended measures taken during his tenure.

Reported by AI

Russia summoned Luxembourg's ambassador on Thursday to protest the exhumation of Andriy Melnyk's remains. The Ukrainian nationalist leader was reburied near Kyiv earlier this week. Moscow described the actions as disrespectful to victims of Nazi Germany.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline