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7,200 Ukrainian service personnel missing since start of invasion
On May 30, Ukraine pushed back Russian troops from the Bakhmut-Lysychansk road, the "lifeline" to Russia's key target Sievierodonetsk - Euromaidan Press

Ukraine's ombudsman Oleh Kotenko says that as many as 7,200 Ukrainian service personnel have gone missing since the start of the Russian invasion.

He told Ukraine's Suspilne TV channel that the majority of them are in Russian captivity.

Mr Kotenko said Ukraine's armed forces had earlier reported some 2,000 missing troops.

But he said the much higher number included members of the National Guard, border guards and the security service.

"Our call centre has information about 7,200 people," said Mr Kotenko, Ukraine's commissioner for missing persons.

He said he hoped that "sooner or later" they would be exchanged for Russian prisoners of war and returned home.

A final goodbye to Roman Ratushnyi, Ukrainian activist, defender - Euromaidan Press

Neither Ukraine's armed forces nor the Russian military have publicly commented on the issue, the BBC reported.

Both Kyiv and Moscow claim to have taken thousands of POWs since Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February.

The two warring sides have since been involved in several prisoner swaps.

Russian military destroys Western weapons amid eastern Ukraine push

On Sunday (July 10), Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said that Kyiv planned a "million-strong army," equipped with Nato weapons, to retake the south of the country from the occupying Russians.

Retaking the areas around the Black Sea coast was vital to the country's economy, he stressed.

However, the comments are more of a rallying cry than a concrete plan, analysts say.

Source: BBC