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Russian lawmaker disputes report saying he adopted a child taken from Ukraine

A Russian lawmaker and staunch supporter of President Vladimir Putin has denied media allegations that he adopted a missing 2-year-old girl who was removed from a Ukrainian children’s home and changed her name in Russia. Sergey Mironov, 70, the leader of political party A Just Russia, asserted on social media that the Ukrainian security services and their Western partners concocted a “fake” report to discredit true Russian patriots like himself.

Quick Read

  1. Mironov’s Denial: Sergey Mironov, a Russian lawmaker and Putin supporter, refuted allegations that he adopted a Ukrainian child, Margarita Prokopenko, who was supposedly taken from a Ukrainian children’s home.
  2. Media Investigation: The BBC and Important Stories claimed Mironov’s wife, Inna Varlamova, took Margarita to Moscow, where her name was changed to Marina. Mironov accuses these outlets of trying to discredit Russian patriots.
  3. Ukrainian Response: The Ukrainian parliament’s human rights commissioner’s office is investigating the report.
  4. ICC Warrants: The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova, accusing them of abducting Ukrainian children.
  5. Human Rights Watch’s View: The organization cannot independently confirm the story but says if true, the adoption and name change would be a war crime.
  6. Details of Margarita’s Alleged Removal: She was reportedly taken from a home in Kherson in August 2022, with Mironov and Varlamova later listed as parents of a child with the same birthday.
  7. Broader Context: Around 20,000 Ukrainian children have allegedly been sent out of Ukraine since the Russian invasion, with some given Russian families and citizenship.
  8. Challenges in Tracing Adoptions: Russian adoption laws make it difficult to track such cases, allowing potential concealment of information about the children.
  9. Russian Stance: Russia claims it is “saving” children, not kidnapping them, and will return them upon request. However, locating these children has been challenging for many Ukrainian families.
  10. Complexity of Reunification: Reuniting children with families during the war is hampered by bureaucracy and international borders.
  11. Long-term Impact: The transfer of Ukrainian children to Russia is expected to have profound and lifelong effects on their development and identity.

The Associated Press has the story:

Russian lawmaker disputes report saying he adopted a child taken from Ukraine

Newslooks- LONDON (AP)

A Russian lawmaker and staunch supporter of President Vladimir Putin has denied media allegations that he adopted a missing 2-year-old girl who was removed from a Ukrainian children’s home and changed her name in Russia.

Sergey Mironov, 70, the leader of political party A Just Russia, asserted on social media that the Ukrainian security services and their Western partners concocted a “fake” report to discredit true Russian patriots like himself.

His statement, posted on X, followed the BBC and independent Russian news outlet Important Stories publishing an investigation Thursday that said Mironov adopted a child named Margarita Prokopenko who was allegedly taken to Moscow at the age of 10 months by the woman to whom he is now married.

Mironov accused the two news organizations of having only “one goal — to discredit those who take an uncompromising patriotic position.”

“You are trying in vain,” he wrote, adding that Russia would win its war in Ukraine.

The office of the Ukrainian parliament’s human rights commissioner told The Associated Press it was looking into the news report.

FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, listens to Sergey Mironov, 70, the leader of political party A Just Russia in Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 14, 2023. A Russian lawmaker and staunch supporter of President Vladimir Putin, Mironov has denied media allegations that he adopted a 2-year-old girl who was seized from a Ukrainian children’s home and changed her name in Russia. (Mikhail Metzel, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)

In March, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Putin and Maria Lvova-Belova, the commissioner for children’s rights in Putin’s office, accusing them of committing war crimes through their involvement in the abduction of children from Ukraine.

Bill Van Esveld, associate director of the Children’s Rights Division at Human Rights Watch, said Friday that the agency could not independently confirm the BBC and Important Stories’ findings. But he thinks the deportation of the girl to Russia, her adoption and her name change would be “a black and white war crime.”

The investigation by the BBC and Important Stories said Margarita was collected in August 2022 from a home for children needing specialized medical care or missing parents in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, which was occupied by Russian soldiers at the time.

The news organizations identified a woman who had visited the baby in Kherson before a group of Russian men removed the child from the home as Inna Varlamova, 55, who later married Mironov. The investigation also cited a birth record created several months later that listed Mironov and Varlamova as the parents of child named Marina who was born Oct. 31, 2021 — Margarita’s birthday.

Ukrainian authorities have estimated that around 20,000 children were sent out of the country without their parents’ knowledge or under false pretenses since Russia invaded in February 2022. A study by Yale University found more than 2,400 Ukrainian children aged 6-17 have been taken to Belarus from four regions of Ukraine that are partially occupied by Russian forces.

The AP reported in Oct. 2022 that Russian officials deported Ukrainian children to Russia or Russian-held territories without consent, told them they weren’t wanted by their parents and gave them Russian families and citizenship.

Vira Yastrebova, director of Eastern Human Rights Group, a Ukrainian non-governmental organization, said Russian authorities were increasingly placing children into Russian foster families for eventual adoption instead of temporary guardianship.

Because Russian law makes it very difficult to find information about adoptions, it is therefore easy “to hide any information” about the children, Yastrebova said.

The Russian ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Antonov, maintained in September that Russia does not “kidnap” Ukrainian children but is “saving” them. Russia has said it will return children to their families once a parent or guardian requests it. But, because many Ukrainian families do not know where their children were taken, they are unable to make the requests.

Even when children are located, reuniting them with their families during the ongoing war often is a complicated process, involving a lot of paperwork and international border crossings. Pope Francis tasked his Ukraine peace envoy earlier this year with trying to get young Ukrainians returned to their country.

The transfer of Ukrainian children to Russia will affect them profoundly and have “a lifelong impact,” Van Esveld told the AP in a phone interview Friday.

“They have no opportunity to go back to their community or country and their development, right to education and right to form their own identity without coercion is impacted,” he said.

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