Ukraine has confirmed the receipt of 1,000 bodies from Russia in a solemn transfer linked to the ongoing war between the two countries, marking one of the rare instances of cooperation since the conflict escalated in 2022.
The development was announced by Ukraine’s Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War, which disclosed that the remains were handed over by Russian authorities during a repatriation exercise. According to Ukraine, the Russian side claims the bodies belong to Ukrainian soldiers killed on the battlefield.
In a statement released via social media, Ukrainian officials noted that the process followed previously agreed humanitarian arrangements, stressing that identification procedures would now be carried out to confirm the identities of the deceased before they are formally returned to their families.
Russia also acknowledged the exchange. Vladimir Medinsky, an aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin, revealed that Moscow received the remains of 38 Russian soldiers in return. Writing on Telegram, Medinsky said the exchange was conducted under agreements reached during earlier negotiations between Russian and Ukrainian delegations in Istanbul.
Despite fierce fighting and ongoing hostilities, the exchange of bodies and prisoners remains one of the few functioning channels of dialogue between Kyiv and Moscow. Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, both sides have suffered heavy losses, although official casualty figures are rarely disclosed.
The latest transfer underscores the grim human cost of the war and highlights the continuing humanitarian efforts that persist even as diplomatic relations remain largely frozen. For families of the fallen, the return of the bodies represents a painful but necessary step toward closure amid a conflict with no immediate end in sight.


















