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FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

Russia Boasts Of Capturing A Ukrainian Orphan Who'd Tried To Return Home

Last spring, after Moscow's troops occupied Mariupol, minors with no parents were forced from the southern city to go to Russia. One 17-year-old recently tried to escape, and return home to be with his sister. He didn't make it — and Russia proudly shared the story.

Photo of refugees from Mariupol reaching Zaporizhzhia, southeast Ukraine

Boys evacuated last spring from the besieged city of Mariupol before it was occupied by Russian forces.

Cameron Manley

A 17-year-old Ukrainian who'd been forcibly taken from occupied Mariupol to Russia at the start of its full-scale invasion was trying to return home, but was captured by Russian security forces at the border with Belarus and will be sent back to Russia.

Maria Lvova-Belova, the so-called ombudsman for Children's Rights in Russia, held a press conference on Tuesday to share the news that Russian security forces had detained Bogdan Ermokhin and returned him to a "foster family" in Russia.

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Lvova-Belova said that Ermokhin had been emotionally manipulated and threatened by Ukrainian “agents” into returning back to Ukraine, where he has a sister. The agents supposedly organized transport and financial support for Ermokhin. “He was deceptively lured out,” she said, “at the last moment, we managed to stop him.”


Ermokhin’s story illustrates the often unknown fates of thousands of Ukrainian minors who have been forcibly relocated to Russia since the start of the invasion. One has even been adopted by Maria Lvova-Belova herself.

Crime, not a "rescue"

When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Bogdan Ermokhin was an orphan and his legal guardian was the director of the Mariupol college where he was studying, the BBC Russian Service reports. Lvova-Belova said Bogdan had been among 31 children who were "found in the cellars of Mariupol," abandoned by their parents after the shelling of the city began.

The children were first taken to Donetsk, and from there to a sanatorium in the Moscow region, where Ermokhin was later taken in by a foster family. Philip Golovnya, the Ukrainian child adopted by Lvova-Belova herself, was reportedly In the same group of minors.

Dmytro Lubinets, Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights, responded to the announcement, saying, “It should be noted that this young man has Ukrainian citizenship. His forced transfer to the territory of the aggressor country is therefore not ‘rescue,’ as Lvova-Belova says, but a crime.”

Lubinets added that Bogdan’s story is further evidence of Russia’s continued illegal abductions of Ukrainian children. “I emphasize once again that these are our Ukrainian children and Russia will be held accountable for every crime.”

Photo of the Save Ukrainian Kids Rally in London

Ukrainians living in London and Future For Ukrainian Children charity project, staged a rally oposite Downing Street on International Children's Day, to tell the story of children who have lost their parents in the russian-Ukrainian War.

Thomas Krych/ZUMA Press Wire

"Re-educating" children

On March 17, the International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova, alleging responsibility for the unlawful deportation and transfer of children during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Russian authorities are "re-educating" at least 6,000 Ukrainian children.

On April 5, British diplomats blocked the UN webcast of an informal security council meeting on Ukraine at which Lvov-Belova is due to speak on Wednesday. “She should not be afforded a UN platform to spread disinformation,” a spokesperson for Britain’s UN mission in New York said in a statement. “If she wants to give an account of her actions, she can do so in The Hague.”

The Ukrainian website Children of War reports the deportation of 16,226 Ukrainian children to Russian territory. So far, only 308 have been returned home. In February 2023, the Humanities Research Laboratory at the Yale School of Public Health found 43 facilities in Russia that housed Ukrainian children.

According to experts, the Russian authorities are "re-educating" at least 6,000 Ukrainian children with Russian propaganda and ideology.

What is happening to these children, as well as Ukrainian teenager Bogdan Ermokhin, remains unclear.


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Society

Psychedelics For PTSD? Tests In The World's Latest Wars, From Ukraine To Afghanistan

Psychedelic-assisted MDMA therapy for PTSD has shown some promise in the West, but plans to export it globally may be premature.

A US soldier

Could MDMA-assisted therapy help with PTSD?

Tech. Sgt. Michael R. Holzworth
Jonathan Moens

When the war in Ukraine broke out, many countries and agencies around the world lent their support in the form of financial aid, weapons, and food. But Olga Chernoloz, a Ukrainian neuroscientist based in Canada, wanted to provide a different kind of assistance: a combination of therapy and the psychedelic drug MDMA.

Such therapy, she said, could help countless people on the ground who are suffering from psychological trauma. “I thought that the most efficacious way I could be of help,” she told Undark, “would be to bring psychedelic-assisted therapy to Ukraine.” Chernoloz’s confidence stems in part from the results of clinical trials on MDMA to treat post-traumatic stress disorder in vulnerable populations, which suggest that such treatments may improve symptoms, or do away with them altogether. But the approach is experimental and has not yet cleared major regulatory hurdles in Canada, Europe, or the United States.

Still, Chernoloz, who is a professor at the University of Ottawa, plans on carrying out clinical trials with Ukrainian refugees in a psychedelic center in the Netherlands in early 2024.

This month, Chernoloz and her colleagues organized an education session for 20 Ukrainian therapists to learn about MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD from the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, or MAPS, one of the most influential organizations dedicated to education and promotion of psychedelic drugs.

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