Russia and Ukraine swap hundreds of prisoners although peace talks remain deadlocked

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Moscow and Kyiv agreed to exchanging 1,000 prisoners, but each side's demands to end the war remain far apart and in direct contradiction.
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Russia will be ready to hand Ukraine a draft document outlining conditions for a long-term peace agreement once a prisoner exchange is completed, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Friday.

Earlier the warring countries each released 390 prisoners and said they would free more in the coming days, in what is expected to be the biggest prisoner swap of the conflict so far.

They agreed at two hours of talks in Istanbul last week to exchange 1,000 prisoners, but failed to agree to a ceasefire proposed by President Donald Trump. Previous prisoner swaps have been mediated by the United Arab Emirates.

President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.Getty Images file

The prisoner swap was the only concrete step towards peace the two sides agreed at their talks in Istanbul.

"Congratulations to both sides on this negotiation. This could lead to something big???," Trump said in a post on Truth Social as the exchange took place.

Hundreds of thousands of soldiers on both sides are believed to have been wounded or killed in Europe's deadliest war since World War II, although neither side publishes accurate casualty figures. Tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians have also died as Russian forces have besieged and bombarded Ukrainian cities.

Ukraine says it is ready for a 30-day ceasefire immediately, but Russia, which launched the war by invading its neighbor in 2022 and now occupies about a fifth of Ukraine, says it will not pause its assaults until conditions are met first. A member of the Ukrainian delegation called those conditions "non-starters".

Trump, who has shifted U.S. policy from supporting Ukraine towards accepting some of Russia's account of the war, had said he could tighten sanctions on Russia if Moscow blocked a peace deal. But after speaking to Putin on Monday he decided to take no action for now.

Moscow says it is ready for peace talks while the fighting goes on, and wants to discuss what it calls the war's "root causes," including its demands Ukraine cede more territory, and be disarmed and barred from military alliances with the West.

Kyiv says that is tantamount to surrender and would leave it defenseless in the face of future Russian attacks.

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