Ukrainian children: OSCE accuses Russia of indoctrinating 1.6 million
An OSCE report accuses Russia of systematic indoctrination and militarisation of around 1.6 million Ukrainian children in the occupied territories.
The number is hard to digest: around 1.6 million Ukrainian children are being subjected to indoctrination and militarisation by Russia in the occupied territories. The accusation does not come from Kyiv — it comes from a report by the OSCE, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, released this Friday, describing a process carried out «systematically».
What does the OSCE report say about Ukrainian children?
That the indoctrination is not an accident of war but state policy: russified school curricula, military-styled youth organisations, weapons training and a propaganda machine aimed squarely at minors — all designed to erase the Ukrainian identity of an entire generation and, at the limit, prepare it to wear the uniform of the country occupying theirs.
Why could this amount to a war crime?
Because international law specifically protects children in occupied territories: transferring them, forcibly re-educating them or recruiting them is matter for international courts — and reports like this one, from a 57-state organisation, are precisely the kind of documentation that underpins future prosecutions. The war, meanwhile, grinds on, and on the diplomatic front NATO has just reinforced military support for Ukraine.
The full document and the organisation’s work are available on the official OSCE site. Reading it hurts; looking away costs more.
Image: C.Stadler/Bwag / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0 at)