Included in the exchange are a husband and wife, both soldiers with the Azov regiment, according to Kyrylo Budanov, chief of the defense intelligence of Ukraine. The husband was captured at Azovstal. His wife was captured earlier in a different location. They have two children.
“The children were living without their parents,” Mr. Budanov said. “We insisted that the Russians to give them over.” Both were part of the exchange.
The commanders of the Azov regiment and a marine unit who fought at Azovstal have been moved to Moscow, where they are being held at the notorious Lefortovo Prison, according to Mr. Budanov. Among those being detained are Lt. Col. Denys Prokopenko, the head of the Azov regiment at Azovstal, and Capt. Svyatoslav Palamar, his deputy, along with Maj. Serhiy Volyna, commander of the 36th Separate Marine Brigade.
“They say they are conducting investigative activities,” Mr. Budanov said, referring to the Russian authorities. “But we understand they are undergoing recruitment — directing them to adopt the Russian position on these events. This is war, you understand.”
Mr. Pushilin, the head of Russian proxy forces in the Donetsk region, said that some of the soldiers handed over to Kyiv were members of “nationalist battalions” and that they were in very bad condition. “They have severe injuries, some have amputated limbs and other complications,” he said.
The reaction of some military bloggers in Russia was swift and angry, calling the exchange a betrayal.