Human Rights

In first, Ukraine extradites captured Russian soldier for war crimes trial

Ukraine transfers captured Russian soldier to Lithuania for war crimes trial, the first extradition of its kind since Moscow's full-scale invasion.

Ukraine's Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko addresses a press conference in Kyiv on July 23, 2025. [Tetiana Dzhafarova/AFP]
Ukraine's Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko addresses a press conference in Kyiv on July 23, 2025. [Tetiana Dzhafarova/AFP]

By AFP |

Ukraine has handed over a captured Russian soldier to Lithuania, where he will be put on trial for alleged war crimes, an extradition it hailed as a "historic" first.

"For the first time since the start of full-scale aggression, Ukraine has handed over a Russian serviceman to a foreign state, Lithuania, for real criminal prosecution for war crimes," Ukraine's prosecutor general Ruslan Kravchenko said on Telegram on October 31.

Kyiv is determined to hold Russian military figures personally responsible for the 2022 invasion and is seeking international justice for numerous alleged atrocities committed by the Russian army.

Officials said the extradited man -- a sailor who had served in the Russian military police -- was captured by the Ukrainian army in the Zaporizhzhia region near the southern village of Robotyne.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin (C) chairs a Security Council meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on November 5, 2025. [Gavriil Grigorov/POOL/AFP]
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (C) chairs a Security Council meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on November 5, 2025. [Gavriil Grigorov/POOL/AFP]

He was "involved in the illegal detention, torture and inhumane treatment of civilians and prisoners of war," Kravchenko said.

One of his victims was a Lithuanian citizen, Kravchenko added.

He said Vilnius was pressing war crimes charges against the man who could face life imprisonment in the Baltic state, a NATO and EU member and Ukraine's staunch ally.

Kravchenko called the extradition "a historic and important precedent for the entire international justice system."

"It is a clear signal to every war criminal: you will not be able to hide from justice in any country of the free world."

The Lithuanian prosecutor general's office said in a statement that the country's law enforcement officers cooperated with Kyiv on the case.

"It is suspected that together with other Russian soldiers, the suspect not only guarded the illegally detained civilians and prisoners of war, but also participated in their beating and torture," it said.

It alleged the torture involved "imprisoning the victims in a metal safe, suffocating them until unconsciousness, hanging them with tied hands, pouring cold water on them in freezing weather and traumatizing with electric shocks."

A court in Vilnius ruled to keep the man in jail for at least three months ahead of a trial, the prosecutor general's office said.

UN probes crimes against humanity

On October 27, a United Nations-backed investigation said that Russia has committed a crime against humanity in forcing people to flee Ukrainian-held territory through continual drone attacks targeting civilians.

The UN's Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine also determined that Russia had committed war crimes in deporting and transferring civilians from occupied areas of Zaporizhzhia.

"Russian authorities have systematically coordinated actions to drive out Ukrainian civilians from their place of residence by drone attacks, as well as deportations and transfers," the probe said.

The commission, established by the UN Human Rights Council shortly after Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, found that Russia had "committed the crime against humanity of murder" across much larger swathes of territory than previously established.

It has also committed "the war crimes of intentionally directing attacks against civilians and civilian objects, and of inflicting inhuman treatment, as well as corresponding human rights violations," it said.

Drone attacks

In May, the commission determined that Russia's months-long, short-range drone attacks targeting civilians along a 100-kilometre stretch on the right bank of the Dnipro River in the Kherson region constituted murder as a crime against humanity.

Five months on, it has extended the scope of those conclusions to a 300-km stretch of Ukrainian-held territory across the Kherson, Dnipropetrovsk and Mykolaiv regions.

It has now also concluded that the attacks were "part of a coordinated policy to drive out civilians from those territories, and amount to the crime against humanity of forcible transfer of population."

"For over one year, Russian armed forces have been directing drone attacks against an extensive range of civilian targets," the report said, including people, houses or buildings, humanitarian distribution points, and critical energy infrastructure," the new report said.

The commission highlighted that the attacks had "compelled thousands to flee".

Operating under a centralized command, Russian troops "intentionally target civilians and civilian objects and cause harm and destruction," it said.

"They even hit first responders," the commission said, including ambulance crews and firefighters, sometimes repeatedly, despite clear markings on vehicles.

Deportations and transfers

The report, which the commission was to present at the UN in New York on Monday, also determined that Russia's move to drive civilians out of areas it occupies in the Zaporizhzhia region "amount to the war crimes of deportations and transfers."

"Arrests, detentions, various forms of violence -- sometimes including torture -- searches, confiscations of documents and property, preceded the transfers or deportations," it said.

The report looked at the Russian authorities' transfer in 2022 and 2023 of civilian adults into Ukrainian-controlled territory, "as a punitive measure for alleged activities against the Russian Federation."

They were forced to walk 10-15 kilometers (6-9 miles) through a "highly dangerous operational area" to reach the Ukrainian lines, it said.

Since 2024, civilian adults have also been deported to Georgia, via Russia, and given "deportation orders" barring them from entry into Russia for typically 20 to 40 years, it said.

For the report, the independent commission said it had interviewed 226 victims, witnesses and others, examined more than 500 publicly available videos of the crimes documented in the report, geolocating nearly half of them.

The commission has previously said Russia's forced transfer and deportation of Ukrainian children to areas under its control amounted to war crimes and possible crimes against humanity.

Moscow does not recognize the commission and does not answer its requests for access, information and meetings.

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