Russia, Ukraine discuss more POW swops; no deal on ceasefire or Putin-Zelensky meeting
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Ukraine’s chief delegate, Mr Rustem Umerov (centre), briefing the media after a third round of talks between Russia and Ukraine in Istanbul on July 23.
PHOTO: AFP
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- Russia and Ukraine discussed further prisoner swops in Istanbul, with Russia offering to hand over 3,000 Ukrainian bodies.
- Ukraine proposed a Zelensky-Putin meeting before the end of August, while Russia wants any meeting to finalise an agreement.
- Negotiators agreed to exchange at least 1,200 more war prisoners each side, and will work on returning Ukrainian children.
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ISTANBUL – Russia and Ukraine discussed further prisoner swops on July 23 at a brief session of peace talks in Istanbul, but the sides remained far apart on ceasefire terms and a possible meeting of their leaders.
“We have progress on the humanitarian track, with no progress on a cessation of hostilities,” Ukraine’s chief delegate, Mr Rustem Umerov, said after talks that lasted just 40 minutes.
He said Ukraine had proposed a meeting before the end of August between Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
He added: “By agreeing to this proposal, Russia can clearly demonstrate its constructive approach.”
Russia’s chief delegate, Mr Vladimir Medinsky, said the point of a leaders’ meeting should be to sign an agreement, not to “discuss everything from scratch”.
He renewed Moscow’s call for a series of short ceasefires of 24 hours to 48 hours to enable the retrieval of bodies.
Ukraine says it wants an immediate and much longer ceasefire.
The talks took place just over a week after US President Donald Trump threatened heavy new sanctions
There was no sign of any progress towards that goal, although both sides said there was discussion of further humanitarian exchanges following a series of prisoner swops, the latest of which took place on July 23.
Mr Medinsky said the negotiators agreed to exchange at least 1,200 more prisoners of war (POWs) from each side, and Russia had offered to hand over another 3,000 Ukrainian bodies.
He said Moscow was working through a list of 339 names of Ukrainian children that Kyiv accuses it of abducting. Russia denies that charge and says it has offered protection to children separated from their parents during the war.
“Some of the children have already been returned back to Ukraine. Work is under way on the rest. If their legal parents, close relatives, representatives are found, these children will immediately return home,” Mr Medinsky said.
Mr Umerov said Kyiv was expecting “further progress” on POWs, adding: “We continue to insist on the release of civilians, including children.”
The Ukrainian authorities say at least 19,000 children have been forcibly deported.
Shortest talks yet
Before the talks, the Kremlin had played down expectations, describing the two sides’ positions as diametrically opposed and saying no one should expect miracles.
At 40 minutes, the meeting was even shorter than the two sides’ previous encounters on May 16 and June 2, which lasted a combined total of under three hours.
Mr Oleksandr Bevz, a member of the Ukrainian delegation, said Kyiv had proposed a Putin-Zelensky meeting in August because that would fall within the deadline set by Mr Trump for a deal.
Mr Putin turned down a previous challenge from Mr Zelensky to meet in person and has said he does not see him as a legitimate leader because Ukraine – which is under martial law because of Moscow’s invasion – did not hold new elections when Mr Zelensky’s five-year mandate expired in 2024.
Russia’s chief delegate, Mr Vladimir Medinsky, speaking to the media after a third round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine in Turkey on July 23.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Mr Trump has patched up relations with Mr Zelensky after a public row with him at the White House in February, and has lately expressed growing frustration with Mr Putin.
Three sources close to the Kremlin told Reuters last week that Mr Putin, unfazed by Mr Trump’s ultimatum, would keep fighting in Ukraine until the West engaged on his terms for peace, and that his territorial demands may widen as Russian forces advance. REUTERS

