From Yahoo:
“How Moscow grabs Ukrainian
kids and makes them Russians”
Olga Lopatkina paced around her
basement in circles like a trapped animal. For more than a week, the Ukrainian
mother had heard nothing from her six adopted children stranded in Mariupol,
and she was going out of her mind with worry. The kids had spent their vacation
at a resort in the port city, as usual. But this time war with Russia had
broken out, and her little ones — always terrified of the dark — were abandoned
in a besieged city with no light and no hope. All they had now was her oldest
son, Timofey, who was still himself just 17. The questions looped endlessly in
her head: Should she try to rescue the children herself — and risk being
killed, making them orphans yet again? Or should she campaign to get them out
from afar — and risk them being killed or falling into the hands of the
Russians? She had no idea her dilemma would lead her straight into a battle
against Russia, with the highest stakes of her life.
___
Russia’s open effort to adopt
Ukrainian children and bring them up as Russian is already well underway, in
one of the most explosive issues of the war, an Associated Press investigation
shows. Thousands of children have been found in the basements of war-torn
cities like Mariupol and at orphanages in the Russian-backed separatist
territories of Donbas. They include those whose parents were killed by Russian
shelling as well as others in institutions or with foster families, known as
“children of the state.” Russia claims that these children don't have parents
or guardians to look after them, or that they can't be reached. But the AP
found that officials have deported Ukrainian children to Russia or Russian-held
territories without consent, lied to them that they weren't wanted by their
parents, used them for propaganda, and given them Russian families and
citizenship. The investigation is the most extensive to date on the grab of
Ukrainian children, and the first to follow the process all the way to those already
growing up in Russia. The AP drew from dozens of interviews with parents,
children and officials in both Ukraine and Russia; emails and letters; Russian
documents and Russian state media.
Whether or not they have parents,
raising the children of war in another country or culture can be a marker of
genocide, an attempt to erase the very identity of an enemy nation. Prosecutors
say it also can be tied directly to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has
explicitly supported the adoptions. “It’s not something that happens spur of
the moment on the battlefield,” said Stephen Rapp, a former U.S.
Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues who is advising Ukraine on
prosecutions. “And so your ability to attribute responsibility to the highest
level is much greater here.” Even where parents are dead, Rapp said, their
children must be sheltered, fostered or adopted in Ukraine rather than deported
to Russia.
Russian law prohibits the
adoption of foreign children. But in May, Putin signed a decree making it easier
for Russia to adopt and give citizenship to Ukrainian children without parental
care — and harder for Ukraine and surviving relatives to win them back. Russia
also has prepared a register of suitable Russian families for Ukrainian
children, and pays them for each child who gets citizenship — up to $1,000 for
those with disabilities. It holds summer camps for Ukrainian orphans, offers
“patriotic education” classes and even runs a hotline to pair Russian families
with children from Donbas. “It is absolutely a terrible story,” said Petro
Andryushchenko, an adviser to the Mariupol mayor, who claims hundreds of
children were taken from that city alone. “We don’t know if our children have
an official parent or (stepparents) or something else because they are forcibly
disappeared by Russian troops.” The picture is complicated by the fact that
many children in Ukraine's so-called orphanages are not orphans at all.
Ukraine's government acknowledged to the U.N. before the war that most children
of the state “are not orphans, have no serious illness or disease and are in an
institution because their families are in difficult circumstances.” Nevertheless,
Russia portrays its adoption of Ukrainian children as an act of generosity that
gives new homes and medical resources to helpless minors. Russian state media
shows local officials hugging and kissing them and handing them Russian
passports.
It’s very hard to pin down the
exact number of Ukrainian children deported to Russia — Ukrainian officials
claim nearly 8,000. Russia hasn't given an overall number, but officials
regularly announce the arrival of Ukrainian orphans in Russian military planes.
In March, Russian children’s rights ombudswoman Maria Lvova-Belova said more
than 1,000 children from Ukraine were in Russia. Over the summer, she said 120
Russian families had applied for guardianship, and more than 130 Ukrainian
children had received Russian citizenship. Many more have come since, including
a batch of 234 in early October. Lvova-Belova has said these children need
Russia’s help to overcome trauma that has left them sleeping badly, crying at
night and drawing basements and bomb shelters. She acknowledged that at first,
a group of 30 children brought to Russia from the basements of Mariupol
defiantly sang the Ukrainian national anthem and shouted, “Glory to Ukraine!”
But now, she said, their criticism has been “transformed into a love for Russia,”
and she herself has taken one in, a teenager. “Today he received a passport of
a citizen of the Russian Federation and does not let go of it!” she posted on
Telegram on Sept. 21, along with a photo. “(He) was waiting for this day in our
family more than anyone else.” Lvova-Belova has been sanctioned by the United
States, Europe, the U.K., Canada and Australia. Her office referred the AP to
her reply in a state-owned news agency that Russia was “helping children to
preserve their right to live under a peaceful sky and be happy.” In August, a
post from a senior official at the Moscow Department of Labor and Social
Protection thanking the Russian foster families declared: “Our Children...Now
they are ours.”
__
As Lopatkina agonized over what
to do, her teenage son’s childhood came to an abrupt end in Mariupol. Suddenly,
Timofey had become the father to all his siblings. Three had chronic illnesses
or disabilities, and the youngest was just 7. As intense shelling broke the
glass around them, they cowered in a basement. When the younger ones were
scared, Timofey carried them in his arms. After one airstrike, they moved their
beds closer together next to the thickest wall. But no wall could keep out the
war. Every day, Timofey awoke at 6 a.m. in the bitter cold and chopped wood for
a bonfire to cook food. All he wanted to do was to finish his work and sleep —
only to have to wake up and do it again. Calluses built up on his hands. His
skin grew thicker in other ways. When airplanes rumbled overhead, he no longer
ran for shelter. “When you walk and see brains of people on the road, right on
the pavement, nothing matters,” he recalled. He promised his mother he would
look after the younger children. But then the power went out, and he lost touch
with her completely. A friend who had joined the fighting offered to take him
out of Mariupol. He refused. He knew he would never forgive himself if he left
his siblings behind. Finally, a local doctor from Mariupol arranged an
evacuation to elsewhere in Ukraine. But pro-Russia forces at a checkpoint
refused to recognize the children’s documents, photocopies of official papers
identifying them and their parents. Timofey’s pleas went nowhere. Instead, the
children ended up in a hospital in the Donetsk People’s Republic, or DPR, a
separatist Russian-controlled area in Ukraine. Timofey was only months away
from turning 18 — the age when he would be drafted into the DPR army against
his homeland. “For the DPR, I would never go to fight in my life,” he said. “I
understood that I had to get out of there one way or another.” At least,
Timofey thought, he could tell his mother he had kept the children safe. He was
close to his mother, and they were alike, he and she — both tough survivors who
would stick it out to the end no matter what. Or so he thought, until he
reached her. “It’s great that they are alive,” she replied. “But we are already
abroad.” Timofey was utterly devastated. His parents had fled Ukraine without
him. He felt they had thrown him away like garbage, along with five children he
hadn’t asked for and couldn’t know how to protect. “Thanks for leaving me,” he
wrote back, furious.
___
The children of Mariupol aren't
the first Russia has been accused of stealing from Ukraine. In 2014, after
Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula, more than 80 children from Luhansk were
stopped at checkpoints and abducted. Ukraine sued, and the European Court of
Human Rights found the children were taken into Russia “without medical support
or the necessary paperwork.” The children were returned to Ukraine before a
final decision. Kateryna Rashevska, a human rights defender, said she knows of
about 30 Ukrainian children from Crimea adopted by Russians under a program
known as Train of Hope. Now, she said, some of those children might well be
Russian soldiers. Since 2015, the Young Army Cadets national movement has
trained youth in Crimea and Russia for potential recruitment into the military.
This time around, at least 96 children have been returned to Ukraine since
March after negotiations. But Ukrainian officials have tracked down the
identities of thousands more in Russia, and the names of many others simply
aren't published. “We cannot ask the Russian Federation to return the children
because we don’t know who they should return,” said Rashevska, with the
Ukrainian organization Regional Central for Human Rights. Kira, a 12-year-old
girl who saw her father shot and killed, was evacuated from Mariupol to Donetsk
with shrapnel wounds on her ear, leg, neck and arm. Kira was reunited with her
grandparents only after the office of the Ukraine deputy prime minister got
involved. Her grandmother, Svitlana Obedynska, said Kira had become withdrawn
and lost interest in everything, and negotiations were “very difficult.” “It
was not decided at our level,” she said. “She wants to be with her family.
After all, she has no one else.”
Russia justifies the deportation
of children by saying it has annexed four territories in Ukraine, but the U.N.
and the rest of the world called the move in late September a sham. The
governor of one of those territories, Serhiy Haidai of Luhansk, has accused
Russian officials of drawing up documents that deprive Ukrainian parents of
their rights. He too fears that Ukrainian children will be enlisted in the
Russian military. Other officials in occupied territories loyal to Moscow have
a more benign view of what Russia is doing. Olga Volkova, who heads an
institution for children in Donetsk, had 225 kids evacuated to an area near the
Russian seaside city of Taganrog, and 10 were taken in by Russian families in
April. After DPR and Russian officials make a list of suitable candidates, her
boarding school secures citizenship for them and sends them to new families in
Russia. If there are Ukrainian relatives, they can stay in touch, call and
perhaps eventually meet, Volkova said. In the meantime, while the war is
ongoing, she noted, the children now still have families of a sort. “Everyone
wants to have a mother, you see?” Volkova said.
___
Olga Lopatkina was a teacher of
music and the arts who had lived a hard life. Now a middle-aged woman with red
and pink streaks in her hair fading to white, she lost her own mother as a
teenager. In 2014, when fighting with Russian-backed forces broke out in
Donetsk, she also lost a home. But this nightmare with her children, she
thought, was the hardest thing yet. Although Mariupol was less than 100
kilometers (60 miles) away from her home in Vuhledar, it was impossible to
reach safely because of bombardment. In the meantime, her 18-year-old
biological daughter, Rada, was at a boxing competition near Kharkiv, another
front-line city. She told herself every day that the war would end fast. It was
the 21st century, after all. Instead, it edged closer. Lopatkina took in two
refugee families from a city near Mariupol, who confirmed her worst fears. One
woman said her husband was killed in front of her, and she had to step over his
corpse. Lopatkina hounded Ukrainian officials, the local governor, social
services, anybody who could evacuate her children. In calls, Timofey told his
mother he was looking after his younger siblings. She was proud and slightly
reassured. Then, on March 1, their connection was lost. She thought her kids
were going to be evacuated to Zaporizhzhia, so she and her husband went there,
with books of fairy tales and other treats. But two days after they arrived,
the state ordered Zaporizhzhia itself to be evacuated instead. Lopatkina had to
make yet another painful decision. Should she wait for an evacuation from
Mariupol that might never happen? Or should she go to collect her oldest
daughter before losing contact with her too? “Let’s go,” she told her husband,
Denys. Lopatkina escaped with Rada to France. In one final plea, she wrote to
the governor of Donetsk: “Don’t forget my orphans.” When she received the
message from Timofey accusing her of deserting them, she was stung but not
surprised. “I can’t even imagine,” she said, her voice breaking as she started
to cry. “If I were him, I would have reacted the same way, and maybe even
worse.” Lopatkina continued to push Russian and Ukrainian officials
incessantly. She sent them photocopies of Ukrainian documents proving her
guardianship. She told them some of the children were sick, and worried that
nobody had even asked about their medication. The children were paraded on
Russian television and told she didn’t love them. It broke her heart. “Every
day they turned the children against us,” she said. “'Your parents abandoned
you … We will transfer you to the best families. Here you will have a better
life.’” She got a job in a garment factory in France and bought furniture,
clothes and toys for children who might or might not return. She chose their
bedrooms in her small duplex in the northwest, in Loue. She planned
celebrations for missed birthdays. Then, much to her dismay, she found out that
other Ukrainian orphans who were with her children had been issued new identity
documents for the DPR. The Donetsk authorities dropped a bombshell. She could
have her children back — if she came through Russia to Donetsk to get them in
person. Lopatkina feared a trap. If she went to Russia, she might never be
allowed to leave. “I will sue you,” she threatened Donetsk officials in an
email on May 18th. “You took my kids. That is a crime.”
___
For some Russian families, taking
in Ukrainian orphans isn't a crime. It’s a gift. One professional foster mother
was called in by the Moscow social services to “come and look” at the eastern
Ukrainian kids who had recently arrived. She already had six Russian foster
kids under her roof, some with disabilities. She took in three more from
Mariupol. “We still have love untapped,” she said. “There are children who need
to be given affection, love, care, family, mom and dad. If we can give it, why
not?” She said she had reached out to the children’s Ukrainian foster mother,
who didn't mind the arrangement. The AP couldn't reach the Ukrainian mother.
But the children didn't hide their resentment of her, described life with her
as constrained and made no effort to call her. They said she had dropped them
off at a bunker in Mariupol. The Russian military got them out, and they had to
choose between adoption by a Russian family and life in a Russian orphanage. After
a guardianship trial in now-occupied Mariupol, the Russian mother has custody
of the children. They have become Russian citizens and call her mom, she said. “We
don’t talk about the war,” she said. “Politics remains politics. This is not
our business.” At her house with a courtyard and inflatable swimming pool, the
children said they felt welcome and accepted. The 15-year-old girl is eager to
start a new life in Russia — but in part because returning to her old one is
impossible. Her school was bombed, one of her classmates died and almost everyone
has left. “Trying to start on a new page is never bad,” she said. “Why not?” Her
17-year-old foster brother interrupted. Two of his friends had died also, he
said. He thinks starting his life anew will give him experience, and he looks
forward to seeing Russia. But he is also worried about not being accepted as a
Ukrainian. He will give it a go for a decade to try and make a fortune, and
then return to Ukraine. “My friends are there, they can support me,” he said.
“I was born there ... I know everything there, I’m just used to it.” Hundreds
more orphans from Ukraine were housed in a leafy seaside camp near Taganrog, an
upscale facility with a large dining room and playgrounds. Yaroslava Rogachyova, 11, had been evacuated
from a children's institution in Donetsk, and was waiting to be sent to a
foster family in Moscow with her two sisters. She said she will miss the sea,
Donetsk and her biological parents back there, but she didn't explain why she
didn't or couldn't go back to them. She is now thinking ahead to her new life. “I’m
going to Moscow, I’ve already seen the family and everyone,” she said. “I liked
the mom from the very beginning.”
__
In the DPR, Timofey didn’t want a
new life — he wanted his old one back. Angry and miserable, he argued with
officials and ate almost nothing. His only escape was reading a book he never
finished, and sneaking out to see a girl. One day he returned with a tattoo of
three daggers on his legs, which could symbolize protection, bravery or power. The
new reality in a new place terrified Timofey, eclipsing his anger at his
mother. On a call, she explained what had happened. He was deeply relieved. “I
missed my parents,” he said. “It was very difficult for me without my mother
and father’s support … I constantly cried like a girl, ‘Mom, it’s hard for me,
I’m tired.’” The little children repeatedly asked when they could go home to
their mother. They were badly fed, slapped and cursed, Timofey said. Then they
heard hospital officials wouldn’t let them go home at all. Timofey’s
13-year-old foster brother, Sasha, was so furious that he slammed his hand on a
slide and broke a finger. “I really missed my parents,” Sasha said. “I didn’t
need anything but my parents.” Two officials pulled Timofey aside and told him
a court in the DPR would strip Lopatkina and her husband of their guardianship.
His younger siblings would go first to an orphanage, then to new families in
Russia. Timofey would go to school in Donetsk. He was enraged. “That can’t be
done,” he said. “It is illegal.” The officials replied that parents who didn’t
come to collect their children didn’t want them. Timofey stormed out. “I was so
disappointed, I didn’t believe in anything,” he said. “I was terrified.” He was
determined to keep together the only family he had known, and he worried that
his siblings would end up with Russian families who wanted them only for the
state aid. He told his mother he could marry his new girlfriend and adopt his
siblings when he turned 18. Then Lopatkina’s efforts finally paid off. She was
working with Darya Kasyanova, the director of the nonprofit SOS Children’s
Villages, who already had helped to negotiate the release of 25 Ukrainian
children from Russia. Sending the children in the first place to Russian
territories instead of Ukraine was “a violation of the rights of the child,”
Kasyanova said. After two months of negotiation and an initial objection from a
senior Russian official, DPR authorities finally agreed to allow a volunteer
with power of attorney from Lopatkina to collect the children. They asked
Timofey if he and his siblings wanted to go back to his foster family or stay
in Donetsk. “Now that I have a chance, I will, of course, go home to my
parents,” he told them. A document was drafted and signed. At last, they were
going to France.
___
After a delay because of
shelling, they finally left on a three-day bus trip through Russia and Latvia
to Berlin. They were grilled at the Russian border and panicked. Timofey texted
his mother. But the volunteer got them through. Timofey met his father at a bus
stop in Berlin. He couldn’t quite believe it. They drove to France, where
Timofey went to pick his mother up from the garment factory as a surprise. Lopatkina
was sewing frantically, replaying the moment her kids were stopped at the
border a dozen times in her head. She had already begun thinking of what new
plan she could hatch to get them back. When Timofey arrived, she was in shock.
For him, the euphoria was wild, a high like nothing he had ever experienced
before. Back at the house, the other children were waiting. They ran toward
their mother, losing their shoes, and jumped into her arms. She ruffled their
hair and held their faces. It was all happening faster than her brain could
process. “Let me see you!” she screamed. “Aaaaah!” The two dogs joined the
party, barking. It took Timofey a couple of days before he could believe he was
really back with his parents. No resentment was left, he said. He erased the
angry message he had sent his mother from his phone and from his mind. “I kept
my promise,” he said. “The burden of responsibility was gone. I said: ‘Mother,
take the reins, that’s all ... I’m a child now.’”
^ The German Nazis did a similar
thing (kidnapping and forcibly Germanizing 200,000 ethnic Polish Children and 10,000
non-German Children from Western Europe) during World War 2.
They set up "Children Education
Camps" (Kindererziehungslager) such as the Kinder-KZ Litzmannstadt (Children’s
Concentration Camp in Lodz – Occupied Poland) which was next to the Lodz Ghetto
where the Germans forced the Jews to live before sending them to the Death
Camps.
3,000 Polish Children were kept
in the Lodz Germanization Camp from 1942-1944 and 200 died there from
starvation and medical experiments. An untold number who the Germans believed
couldn’t be “Germanized” were sent to the Gas Chambers at Treblinka or
Auschwitz.
Of the 200,000 Polish Children
kidnapped by the Germans only 30,000 were ever found after the War. The rest
were either murdered or had new German identities and their files destroyed.
The Robbery of Children was
declared a Crime of Genocide by the International Military Tribunal in
Nuremberg after the War.
The 1948 UN Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, article 2e, classifies as Genocide
the Forced Transfer of Children of Members of a Group to Another Group.
The 1948 UNESCO Conference, held
in Trogen, Switzerland, declared the Robbery and Extermination of Children a Crime
Against Humanity.
The Russians (Politicians,
Soldiers and Ordinary People) are committing Crimes Against Humanity by
kidnaping 307,000 Ukrainian Children (so far) and sending them to Filtration
Camps inside the Russian Federation where they are beaten and tortured until
they get the “Ukrainian kicked out of them” and become Russian.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
even openly and officially acknowledged this Crime on May 30, 2022, when he
signed a Decree that streamlined the process of giving Ukrainian Orphans or
those without Parental Care Russian Citizenship.
Not only are Ukrainian Children
(most aren’t Orphans) being kidnapped and sent to Russia to undergo Forced
Russification, but 1,629,911 Ukrainian
Adults have been kidnapped and sent to Russia to undergo a similar Forced Russification.
Like the German Nazis - who wanted to get rid of the Poles and many
others – the Russian Nazis want to get rid of every Ukrainian Man, Woman and
Child. Those they can Re-Educate and Force to become Russians live and those
that refuse or can’t be changed are killed.
This is another example of the
Ukrainian Genocide being carried out, at every level of Russian Society (both
inside Russian-Occupied Ukraine and inside the Russian Federation itself) by
the help of Ordinary Russians - the same
way Ordinary Germans did in the 1940s.
This is not only one more War
Crime being committed by Russia and the Russian People as a Whole, but is a
Crime Against Humanity and Ethnic Cleansing.
The World needs to stop Putin, his
Advisors, his Soldiers and his People – the Russian People – from continuing to
destroy a Whole Group of People - ie.
Genocide.
The World didn't accept when
Ordinary Germans in 1945 claimed they "Didn't Know" and the World
can't accept when Ordinary Russians today try to claim the same. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/moscow-grabs-ukrainian-kids-makes-102530773.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.