(Reuters) – Ukraine has collated thousands of reports of its children being deported to Russia and wants their plight addressed at a summit of the Group of 20 major economies, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s chief of staff was quoted as saying on Tuesday.
“The Russian Federation continues to commit its crimes in connection with Ukrainian children,” Zelenskiy’s office quoted Andriy Yermak as saying at a meeting he chaired of a group of officials responsible for child protection. “The removal of children continues.”
The U.S. envoy to the United Nations said in early September that more than 1,800 children were transferred from Russia-controlled areas of Ukraine, to Russia, in July alone. Ukraine wants such deportations investigated as a war crime.
The statement by Zelenskiy’s office said its National Information Bureau showed 10,500 children had been deported or forcibly displaced. Ukraine’s minister responsible for reintegrating Russian-occupied territories noted at the meeting that only 96 children had been returned.
Yermak was quoted as saying Ukraine could count on U.N. help, but he restated Ukraine’s lack of confidence in the International Committee of the Red Cross to help.
“Unfortunately, due to the very passive position of international organizations, in particular the ICRC, today we are unable to determine the exact number, how many, and where our children are,” he said.
Yermak said discussions about the return of the children should start at the Nov. 15-16 G20 summit in Indonesia, which Zelenskiy is expected to attend, most likely remotely.
Yermak referred at the meeting to Children of War, a portal where the country collects reports on the impact of the war.
The portal on Tuesday showed 430 children had been killed, 827 wounded, 260 disappeared, 7,343 found, 10,570 deported and 96 returned since Feb. 24, the date Russia invaded its neighbor.
“We really need to draw the world’s attention to what is happening, because this is an absolute genocide of Ukrainians, Ukrainian children, our country,” he said.
Russia has said in the past that it is offering humanitarian aid to those wishing to flee Ukraine voluntarily.
(Reporting by Elaine Monaghan in Washington, DC; Editing by Stephen Coates)