Human Rights

Ukraine says ready to open humanitarian corridor in Russian border region

More than 1,500 civilians are still living in areas of Kursk province, Russia, that Ukraine's army seized in a shock cross-border offensive launched in August.

Women carry humanitarian aid in the center of Kursk on October 18. [Andrey Borodulin/AFP]
Women carry humanitarian aid in the center of Kursk on October 18. [Andrey Borodulin/AFP]

By Kontur and AFP |

KYIV -- Ukraine Thursday (February 6) said it was ready to open a humanitarian corridor to let hundreds of Russian civilians living in border areas seized by its army return to Russian-controlled territory -- if Moscow requests one.

More than 1,500 civilians are still living in areas of Kursk province, Russia, that Ukraine's army seized in a shock cross-border offensive launched in August.

Rare anger at the Russian authorities has since been growing among those who have lost contact with family members believed to be trapped without communication on the other side of the front line.

"We are ready to open a humanitarian corridor from Kursk province to the depths of Russia in response to an official request of the Russian Federation," the office of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a statement to AFP.

Security guards patrol inside a center for displaced persons in an undisclosed location in Kursk province, Russia, on August 29, following Ukraine's cross-border offensive. [Tatyana Makeyeva/AFP]
Security guards patrol inside a center for displaced persons in an undisclosed location in Kursk province, Russia, on August 29, following Ukraine's cross-border offensive. [Tatyana Makeyeva/AFP]

"Apparently, the Russians do not want such a humanitarian corridor, because we have not received a corresponding request from them," the presidency said, accusing Moscow of "indifference" to the fate of its own citizens.

The offer to help facilitate their return comes as Russia said Ukrainian forces had attempted a fresh offensive in Kursk, with Zelenskyy praising his fighters who have controlled swathes of Russian territory for the past six months.

Russia has been clawing back ground, but Ukraine still occupies dozens of border settlements around the regional hub of Sudzha.

'Difficult situation'

The Kremlin had said earlier Thursday that it was doing "everything" it could, but refused to comment publicly on the idea of a humanitarian corridor.

"This question depends on contacts that our soldiers are implementing. They cannot be carried out publicly," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

"The authorities are doing everything they can to provide help to ... our citizens, who have found themselves in such a difficult situation because of the aggressive actions of the Kyiv regime," he added.

Peskov was responding to a question about calls from Russian citizens to open some kind of corridor to allow their relatives to return from areas taken under Ukraine's control.

Kyiv's attack into Kursk province in August reshaped the nearly three-year war and was the first time a foreign army had taken control of Russian territory since World War II.

In a meeting with the provincial governor on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged the situation was "very difficult" but did not address the growing anger over the fate of missing persons.

Zelenskyy has hailed the operation as an important bargaining chip in future peace talks and said the capture of Russian soldiers there had helped Kyiv secure the return of its own prisoners of war (POWs).

'Peace through strength'

Zelenskyy on Thursday praised his troops for the Kursk offensive and issued state honors to several army units.

"The occupier can and should be beaten on its territory," he said in a social media post.

"The Kursk operation clearly explains the meaning of the principle of 'peace through strength,'" he said, referring to a message he has been promoting to secure ongoing military support from Ukraine's Western partners.

Ukraine's military said earlier Thursday it had taken 909 Russian soldiers captive during the operation, replenishing what Kyiv calls the "exchange fund" of POWs it can swap for captured Ukrainians.

Thursday marked six months since the start of the offensive.

Ukraine has facilitated the return of a handful of Russians, including children, who lived in villages and towns it captured, though there has been no mechanism for their mass return.

The spokesman for Ukraine's army operating in Kursk, Oleksiy Dmytrashkivsky, told AFP on Thursday that a little more than 1,500 Russians were still living in areas under Kyiv's control.

About six million Ukrainians, including 1.5 million children, live in areas of the country under Russia's control, officials in Kyiv said last year.

Millions more were forced to flee their homes in the east and south when Russia invaded in February 2022.

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The situation has repeated itself. In August, the RF-Russian authorities showed indifference to their citizens under occupation by not even raising the issue of a humanitarian corridor. Even Moskalkova said that the Ukrainians demonstrated humane behavior and sent willing Russians through Sumy and Belarus to RF-Russia.

Now we have the same problem again. It must be assumed that RF-Russia would rather speculate about Russians under occupation than contact the office of the President of Ukraine or the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to resolve this issue.

The newly appointed acting governor of the Kursk Region, Khinshtein, doesn't need a humanitarian corridor. The cleanup tool in the region has changed, but the indifference to people remains.

If Putin doesn't care for Russians even in RF-Russia, then what is this talk about Russians in Ukraine?

What are the goals of the war? What was declared a day or two before full-scale operations? At the time, nothing was said about seizing regions of Ukraine. But the topic of Russians was raised. The Kursk Region shows everything for what it is.