Some 1.6 mln Ukrainian children live in territories occupied by Russia
As of October 2024, 1.6 million Ukrainian children aged 0 to 18 live in the territories of Ukraine temporarily occupied by Russia. Such data were made public during the presentation of the analytical report dubbed "Russia's Policy on the Destruction of the Identity of Children in the TOT (temporarily occupied territories) of Ukraine: Outcomes of 2024" at the Ukraine Media Center.
"If we are talking about children in the occupied territories, then we are talking about approximately 1.6 million children. We do not know the exact data, but we rely on the information provided by the Russian Federation and the occupation authorities. So this figure is approximate," said Maria Sulialina, head of the CCE Almenda.
At the same time, head of the national advocacy department of the CCE Almenda, Valentyna Potapova, noted that today 16% of school-age children study in the temporarily occupied territories.
“16% - that is almost every fifth child - studies in the occupied territories,” she added.
Advertising
Advertising
MORE ABOUT
Group of children returned from Kherson temporarily occupied territory
15:51, 11.12.2025
Ukrainian Red Cross opens new space for children in Lviv region
11:45, 09.12.2025
PGO on UN General Assembly decision on deported Ukrainian children: World demands response
19:36, 04.12.2025
Melania Trump: Cooperation on return of Ukrainian children will continue to drive process forward through next phase
16:31, 04.12.2025
Russia launches large-scale Russification of temporarily occupied regions
09:16, 01.12.2025
LATEST
USA, Europe offer multi-level security guarantees for Ukraine after war – media
21:43, 18.12.2025
US Senate approves 2026 defense budget, $400 mln allocated for Ukraine – Stefanishyna
21:41, 18.12.2025
Shmyhal discusses developing security cooperation with new Czech defense minister
20:54, 18.12.2025
Ukrainian MFA responds to statement by Serbian Minister of Information: Fly won’t enter closed mouth
20:39, 18.12.2025
Ukrainian Exchange wins first-instance court ruling in license dispute with securities regulator