How Moscow grabs Ukrainian kids and makes them Russians

Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_19879 Olga Lopatkina embraces her adopted children in a park in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. 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 her children who were evacuated from Mariupol. An Associated Press investigation has found that Russia’s strategy to take Ukrainian orphans and bring them up as Russian is well underway. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_30711 FILE - Seen through a broken window, a fire burns at an apartment building after the shelling of a residential district in Mariupol, Ukraine, March 11, 2022. An Associated Press investigation has found that Russia’s strategy to take Ukrainian orphans and bring them up as Russian is well underway. 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. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka, File)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_39023 Children from an orphanage in the Donetsk region, eat a meal at a camp in Zolotaya Kosa, the settlement on the Sea of Azov, Rostov region, southwestern Russia, Friday, July 8, 2022. Russia's open effort to adopt Ukrainian children and bring them up as Russian is emerging as one of the most explosive issues of the war. (AP Photo)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_50927 Children from different orphanages from the Donetsk region, eat a meal at a camp in Zolotaya Kosa, the settlement on the Sea of Azov, Rostov region, southwestern Russia, Friday, July 8, 2022. Russia's open effort to adopt Ukrainian children and bring them up as Russian is emerging as one of the most explosive issues of the war. (AP Photo)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_12567 Olga Lopatkina and her family walk in a park in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. 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 her children who were evacuated from Mariupol. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_53260 Timofey, left, and Denys Lopatkin watch TikTok videos from Ukraine in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. It took Timofey a couple of days before he could believe he was really back with his parents after being evacuated from Mariupol. 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 his mother to collect her children. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_10752 Maksim, left, Eduardo, Timofey, front center, and Varvara, right, play in a park in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. An Associated Press investigation has found that Russia’s strategy to take Ukrainian orphans and bring them up as Russian is well underway. 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 their mother to collect them. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_34703 Timofey, right, touches Sasha's head in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. At 17, Timofey was suddenly the father to all his siblings when they were separated from their parents during the war. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_53449 Ukrainian children Olesya Lyadchenko, left, and Yaroslava Rogachyova attend a camp in Zolotaya Kosa, the settlement on the Sea of Azov, Rostov region, southwestern Russia, Friday, July 8, 2022. An Associated Press investigation has found that Russia’s strategy to take Ukrainian orphans and bring them up as Russian is well underway. Yaroslava said she will miss the sea and Donetsk, but she has already met – only via video link by then her new family and likes them. (AP Photo)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_85373 Diana, left, Lena and Sonya, right, from the Donetsk region craft in the playroom at a camp in Zolotaya Kosa, the settlement on the Sea of Azov, Rostov region, southwestern Russia, Friday, July 8, 2022. Russia portrays its adoption of Ukrainian children as an act of generosity that gives new homes and medical resources to helpless minors. (AP Photo)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_53800 Boys from an orphanage in the Donetsk region sit in beds at a camp in Zolotaya Kosa, the settlement on the Sea of Azov, Rostov region, southwestern Russia, Friday, July 8, 2022. Russia portrays its adoption of Ukrainian children as an act of generosity that gives new homes and medical resources to helpless minors. (AP Photo)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_50123 Timofey shows a tattoo of three daggers, which could symbolize protection, bravery or power, he got months ago before leaving Ukraine, in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. At 17, Timofey was suddenly the father to all his siblings when they were separated from their parents during the war. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_43565 Timofey sits in a car in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. It took Timofey a couple of days before he could believe he was really back with his parents after being separated from them during the war. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_41546 Olga Lopatkina, center, serves her family a snack, in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. 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 who were evacuated from Mariupol. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_83811 Olga Lopatkina speaks to The Associated press during an interview in a park in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. She told herself every day that the war would end fast. It was the 21st century, after all. Instead, it edged closer. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_25341 Olga Lopatkina and her children pose for a photo in front of their house in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. 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 her children who were evacuated from Mariupol. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
Russia_Ukraine_War_Stolen_Children_47580 Olga Lopatkina, left, and Maksim arrive home after a walk in a park in Loue, western France, Saturday, July 2, 2022. 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 her children who were evacuated from Mariupol. (AP Photo/Jeremias Gonzalez)
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Olga Lopatkina paced around her basement like a trapped animal. She hadn’t heard from her six adopted children stranded in Mariupol for over a week, and she didn’t know what to do.

The family would end up getting caught up in one of the most explosive issues of the war: Russia’s open effort to take Ukrainian orphans and bring them up as Russian.

An Associated Press investigation shows that Russia’s strategy is well underway. Thousands of children have been taken from basements of bombed out cities like Mariupol and from orphanages in the Russian-backed separatist territories of Donbas. They include those whose parents were killed by Russian shelling, others in institutions or with foster families.

Russia claims many of these children have no parents or guardians, 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, and given them Russian families and citizenship.

The investigation is the most extensive to date on the grab of Ukrainian orphans, and the first to follow the process all the way to those already growing up in Russia. It drew on dozens of interviews with parents, children and officials in Ukraine and Russia; emails and letters; Russian documents and Russian state media.

Raising the children of war in another country or culture can be a marker of genocide, an attempt to erase a people’s very identity. Prosecutors tie the policy directly to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“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.

Russian law prohibits the adoption of foreign children. But in May, Putin signed a decree expediting granting Russian citizenship to Ukrainian children without parental care.

Russia has prepared a register of suitable Russian families for Ukrainian children and offers substantial financial support. It portrays the adoptions as an act of generosity. Russian state television airs ceremonies of officials handing out passports to Ukrainian children.

How many is hard to say. Ukrainian officials claim nearly 8,000 children have been deported to Russia.

Russia hasn’t given an overall number. In March, Russian children’s rights ombudswoman Maria Lvova-Belova said 1,000 children from Ukraine were in Russia. Many more have come since, including over 230 in early October.

Lvova-Belova herself has taken in a Mariupol teenager and has been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department, the European Union, 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.”

The AP visited a leafy seaside camp near Taganrog, where hundreds of Ukrainian orphans were housed.

One professional foster mother in the Moscow region said the local social services called her to take in Ukrainian children. Already fostering six Russian kids, she picked three from Mariupol. After a guardianship court case in now occupied-Mariupol, she was granted custody of the children, who are now Russian citizens.

The children said after their foster mother dropped them off at a bunker in Mariupol, the Russian military got them out. They had to choose between adoption by a Russian family and life in a Russian orphanage.

At the house with a courtyard and inflatable swimming pool, the 15-year-old girl said she is eager to start a new life in Russia — in part because her school in Ukraine was bombed, one of her classmates died, and almost everyone has left.

Russia was also accused of stealing children from Ukraine in 2014, after it annexed the Crimean Peninsula. Then, Ukraine reported to the European Court of Human Rights that more than 80 children from Luhansk were abducted at a checkpoint and taken to Russia. Separately, Russian families adopted at least 30 children from Crimea.

This time, at least 96 children have been returned to Ukraine since March following negotiations, some at top government levels.

In Mariupol, Lopatkina’s kids cowered for days in a basement at the resort where they’d been vacationing. The 17-year-old foster son, Timofey, minded his younger siblings — three with chronic illnesses or disabilities.

They lost contact with their mother when the power went out across the city. Then a Mariupol doctor succeeded in evacuating them — only to be turned back by pro-Russia forces at a checkpoint. They ended up in a hospital in the separatist Russian-controlled Donetsk People’s Republic, or DPR.

When Timofey messaged his mother, she was already out of the country. He was livid.

It took a few calls for Olga Lopatkina to explain to Timofey what had happened.

For the music and arts teacher who had lost her mother as a teenager and her home in the 2014 fighting, the nightmare with her children was the hardest thing she experienced. When this war broke out, it quickly became deadly to get from her home in Vuhledar, now a front line, to Mariupol, 100 kilometers (60 miles) away. Her 18-year-old biological daughter, Rada, was stranded with her uncle near Kharkiv, another front-line city.

When the bombing approached, Lopatkina decided to head to the borders, fetching her daughter along the way. They made their way to France.

She campaigned Russian and Ukrainian officials and reached out to activists. The Donetsk authorities finally told her she could have her children back if she came through Russia to get them. She feared a trap and declined.

In the DPR, officials told Timofey a court would strip Lopatkina and her husband of their guardianship and his younger siblings would end up with new families in Russia.

Then finally, a breakthrough. DPR authorities agreed to allow a volunteer with power of attorney from Lopatkina to collect the children.

After a three-day bus trip through Russia, the children met their father in Berlin and drove to France. “The burden of responsibility was gone,” Timofey said. “I said: ‘Mother, take the reins, that’s all … I’m a child now.”

___

Lori Hinnant, Cara Anna and Erika Kinetz contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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