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Ukraine: Human rights, alleged recruitment, and ICC prosecutor suspension

Nexus Europa Newsroom
Posted Jun 10, 2026, 09:00 PM UTC · In the digest of 2026-06-10-2100
Ukraine: Human rights, alleged recruitment, and ICC prosecutor suspension

Ukrainian Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinets clarified his initial meeting with Russian ombudsman Yana Lantratova. Reports detail alleged Russian recruitment of minors for killings and Rosatom's Chornobyl involvement. ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan was suspended.

Ukrainian Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinets clarified that his initial meeting with Russian ombudsman Yana Lantratova focused on establishing contact for future dialogue, rather than immediately addressing allegations of her involvement in child deportations from Kherson. Separately, Ukrainian law enforcement has documented six cases this year where Russian special services reportedly recruited underage girls for contract killings of Ukrainian military personnel. Human rights expert Boris Zakharov emphasized that the release of prisoners and civilian detainees should precede negotiations, noting a recent exchange returned only one civilian among 186 Ukrainians. Meanwhile, International Criminal Court Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan was suspended pending a harassment investigation, a decision his legal team deemed "unlawful." Allegations also continue to link Rosatom employees to the occupation of the Chornobyl nuclear power plant, following a reported Russian drone attack on a nuclear waste storage facility on June 7, 2026.

Sources: Радіо Свобода, Громадське, Українська правда

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