WASHINGTON/MOSCOW/ISTANBUL (EFE).— In the largest prisoner exchange since the Cold War, the United States and several allied countries exchanged 24 prisoners with Russia yesterday, including American journalist Evan Gershkovich and Spanish-Russian Pablo González, at Ankara airport under the coordination of the Turkish secret services.
According to the White House and the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), Moscow released 16 people: three US citizens and one person with legal residence in the United States, as well as five Germans and seven Russians, while the United States and its allies released another eight people who were transferred to Russia, along with two minors, bringing the total number of those released to 24.
Seven countries
Turkish channel NTV said the prisoners were brought to the Turkish capital from seven countries: the United States, Germany, Poland, Slovenia, Norway and Russia, before ten of them – including two minors – travelled to Russia after the exchange, which was coordinated by the Turkish secret services (MIT).
Among those exchanged are American journalist Evan Gershkovich of the Wall Street Journal; Spanish-Russian journalist Pablo González, arrested in Poland; American soldier Paul Whelan; German Rico Krieger, sentenced to death in Belarus; Russian opposition figure Ilya Yashin; and Vadim Krasikov, an FSB (formerly KGB) officer imprisoned in Germany for the murder of a Chechen dissident.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly suggested in recent months that Krasikov could be exchanged for a prisoner in Russian jails.
The United States confirmed that negotiations initially included the release of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, but he died in a Russian prison last February.
US President Joe Biden has hailed the prisoner swap, in which the US administration had placed the release of Whelan and Gershkovich, a Russia correspondent for the Wall Street Journal, at the centre of negotiations, as a “diplomatic feat”.
“Some of these women and men have been unjustly detained for years. They have all endured unimaginable suffering and uncertainty. Today, their agony is over,” he said.
The Biden administration had put at the centre of the negotiations the release of Whelan, a former US Marine detained since December 2018, and of journalist Gershkovich, from March 2023.
Russia insists that the released prisoners were working “in the interests of the United States.”
The Federal Security Service also confirmed the release of eight Russians imprisoned in Western countries in exchange for 16 Russians and foreigners serving sentences in Western prisons, saying the prisoners handed over by Moscow were working in the interests of foreign states and to the detriment of Russian security.
#Russia #exchanges #prisoners #countries
2024-08-10 12:59:01