AFP16 June 2025 | 10:45

Kyiv says 1,245 bodies returned to Ukraine from Russia

Russia and Ukraine reached a deal on a large-scale exchange of prisoners and bodies of killed soldiers, the only visible result from two rounds of direct talks in the Turkish city of Istanbul.

Kyiv says 1,245 bodies returned to Ukraine from Russia

A man walks near the makeshift memorial to Ukrainian and foreign fighters on the Independence Square in Kyiv, on February 16, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Picture: Tetiana Dzhafarova/AFP

Russia has returned 1,245 bodies to Ukraine, Kyiv said on Monday, the final stage of a deal to repatriate more than 6,000 dead Ukrainian soldiers agreed at peace talks this month.

Russia and Ukraine reached a deal on a large-scale exchange of prisoners and bodies of killed soldiers, the only visible result from two rounds of direct talks in the Turkish city of Istanbul.

"Another 1,245 bodies returned to Ukraine -- repatriation part of Istanbul agreements has been completed," the government agency coordinating the repatriation said.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov said on Facebook that Kyiv has received more than 6,000 bodies in total over the past week.

The Russian defence ministry gave a slightly different figure of 1,248 for the number of bodies returned in the final stage of the accord -- three more than Kyiv said it had received.

Moscow's defence ministry said it had "fulfilled the agreement".

It also said it was ready to "hand over another 2,239 bodies of fallen servicemen", an offer extra to what was agreed in Istanbul.

Moscow said it had received the bodies of 51 dead Russian soldiers in return, taking the total number handed over by Ukraine in the latest exchanges to 78.

Kyiv initially said the two sides had agreed to "exchange" the bodies of 6,000 dead Ukrainian soldiers, though Russia has always presented it as unilateral decision.

Tens of thousands of soldiers have been killed on both sides since Russia invaded in February 2022, according to independent monitors and Western intelligence agencies.

Neither side releases regular or reliable figures on the number of their own casualties but they do publish claims about the other side's losses that are widely seen as inflated.