Moscow’s envoy to the United Nations stated on Monday that the country intends to return all Ukrainian children who were transferred to Russia as soon as the conditions are considered safe.
The Ukrainian government estimates that more than 16,000 children have been transferred from Ukraine to Russia or Russian-controlled areas since the start of the fighting.
UN investigators have concluded these forced deportations amount to a war crime.
“We wanted to spare them of the danger that military activities may pose,” Vasily Nebenzya, Russia’s Permanent Representative to the UN, was quoted as saying by the Russian state news agency TASS.
The Russian diplomat hit back against widespread international condemnation, saying the issue of children forcefully brought to Russia was “totally overblown”.
“When conditions are safe, of course, why not,” he added.
On Friday, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin over the “unlawful deportation” of children from occupied areas of Ukraine.
“There are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr Putin bears individual criminal responsibility for the aforementioned crimes,” it said in a statement.
The arrest warrant was condemned by the Kremlin, with its press secretary Dmitry Peskov calling it “outrageous and unacceptable”.
Russia does not recognise the jurisdiction of the court, he added.
Ukrainian children refugees
In March, the UN Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine said there was evidence of the illegal transfer of hundreds of Ukrainian children refugees to Russia.
Its report noted that Russia is placing Ukrainian children in foster families to “create a framework in which some of the children may end up remaining permanently” in Russia.
Investigators wrote these transfers often “became prolonged”, while the children themselves were subjected to mistreatment, forced to wear “dirty clothes” and “screamed at” in some cases.
It quoted witnesses claiming smaller children may not be able to contact their families and “lose contact with them indefinitely”.
The report concludes that forced deportations of Ukrainian children “violate international humanitarian law, and amount to a war crime”.