Kremlin says it does not know location of captured U.S. 'mercenaries'
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[June 21, 2022]
MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin said on
Tuesday it did not know the location of two Americans captured while
fighting in eastern Ukraine, but that they were mercenaries and could be
sentenced to death in Russian-backed breakaway territories.
Americans Alexander Drueke, 39, and Andy Huynh, 27, went missing this
month while fighting near Kharkiv. Russian state media later showed
video interviews with the pair, saying they had been captured by
Russian-backed forces.
Citing an unidentified source, the Interfax news agency reported that
the men were in the separatist self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic
(DPR) in eastern Ukraine.
Britons Shaun Pinner and Aiden Aslin and Moroccan citizen Brahim Saadoun
were sentenced to death by a DPR court this month after being captured
fighting with the Ukrainian army.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in a call with reporters that
Moscow could not rule out that the two captured men, both from Alabama,
would also be sentenced to death if put on trial in a separatist
territory.
Though Russia does not carry out the death penalty, the Donetsk and
Luhansk People's Republics, whose independence is recognised only by
Moscow, have it on their statute books.
"We are talking about mercenaries who threatened the lives of our
service personnel. And not only ours, but also the service personnel of
the DPR and LPR."
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A still image taken from Russian state TV footage that it said shows
Andy Huynh, a U.S. citizen captured by Russian forces while fighting
for Ukraine, at an unknown location, in a still image from a video
released on June 17, 2022. Video released June 17, 2022. RU-RTR/Handout
via REUTERS
Asked whether the Americans could be put on trial in
the DPR and sentenced to death, Peskov said: "We cannot exclude
anything because these are decisions for the court. We never comment
on them and have no right to interfere in court decisions."
Reuters could not immediately verify the Interfax report on the
location of the Americans. A spokesperson in the DPR declined
immediate comment.
The Kremlin says that as "mercenaries", the men are not protected by
the Geneva Conventions, which outline how prisoners of war should be
treated.
Relatives of the captured Americans say they are not mercenaries and
had travelled to Ukraine as volunteers in April to help repel
Russian forces.
Alexander Drueke's mother Lois said: "Alex did not go in a military
capacity. He went as a civilian with military training."
Huynh and Drueke last spoke to relatives on June 8 to say they were
going on a mission and would be out of contact for a day or two.
They were feared captured after they did not return to base.
Family members said they later found out that the men had been in
Kharkiv region, which borders the Donetsk region to the north.
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin Liffey, William Maclean)
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