The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office published a UK-backed OSCE statement responding to the Moscow Mechanism report on Ukrainian children on 9 July 2026, with 41 participating States condemning Russia’s reported indoctrination, militarisation and unlawful deportation of children.
The statement followed the OSCE Moscow Mechanism report requested by the participating States after they invoked the mechanism on 14 May 2026. It focused on Ukrainian children in temporarily occupied territories, children forcibly transferred to such territories, and children unlawfully deported to Russia.
The report examined alleged violations and abuses linked to international humanitarian law, international human rights law and OSCE commitments. It also considered whether Russia’s actions formed a coordinated and systematic policy affecting children’s identity, education, family contact and personal security.
OSCE Moscow Mechanism Statement on Ukrainian Children
The joint statement was delivered at the OSCE in Vienna on behalf of the 41 participating States that invoked the Moscow Mechanism. It said those states acted because of credible and mounting reports concerning Russia’s treatment of Ukrainian children during its war against Ukraine.
The participating States said the countries had asked ODIHR to inquire whether Ukraine would invite a mission of experts to establish the facts and circumstances. The request covered possible breaches of OSCE commitments and alleged violations linked to militarisation, indoctrination, forcible transfer and unlawful deportation.
- Statement location: Vienna was the setting for the OSCE delivery.
- Mechanism date: the Moscow Mechanism was invoked on 14 May 2026.
- Participating states: 41 countries backed the statement.
Report Examines Indoctrination And Militarisation Claims
The report focused on Ukrainian children affected by Russia’s presence in temporarily occupied territories and by transfers or deportations connected to the war. The OSCE report found the concerns included militarisation, indoctrination, coercion and other repressive practices.
The joint statement said credible reporting suggested that the practices were aimed, among other things, at erasing Ukrainian identity and compelling loyalty to the occupying power. The experts were asked to collect, consolidate and analyse information on practices, legislation and school curricula.
OSCE Report Findings on Ukrainian Children
The Moscow Mechanism experts concluded the report described a coordinated mechanism involving education law, youth policy, family law, citizenship regulations and legislation on terrorism and extremism. It said the experts concluded that the approach to Ukrainian children constituted a system of purposeful design.
The findings cited in the report described school-level indoctrination in occupied territories and militarisation through state-sponsored youth organisations and re-education camps. The report also referred to obstruction of family reunification and a failure to establish a mechanism for restoration of identity.
- School system: the report said indoctrination operated across every level.
- Youth organisations: militarisation was described beyond the classroom.
- Family contact: reunification was described as being obstructed.
Reported Areas Of Concern
| Area | Reported Practice | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Education | Russian curriculum | Occupied territories |
| Militarisation | Youth organisations | Beyond classrooms |
| Citizenship | Document pressure | Access to services |
| Families | Blocked reunification | Identity concerns |
OSCE Recommendations and Requested Actions
According to the UK-backed statement it called on Russia to stop its war against Ukraine and withdraw from Ukraine’s internationally recognised territory. It highlighted recommendations to halt indoctrination and militarisation, end coercion against children, parents and teachers, return deported children and establish a mechanism for restoration of identity.
The statement also referred to the need for humanitarian corridors to restore and safeguard meaningful family contact. It said separated Ukrainian children should be safely reunited with parents, relatives and true legal guardians, and should not be part of prisoner-of-war exchanges.
Requested Actions
| Action | Directed To | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Halt practices | Russia | End indoctrination |
| Return children | Russia | Support reunification |
| Restore identity | Russia | Address documentation |
| Use accountability routes | International bodies | Support justice processes |
International Humanitarian Law Findings
The joint statement also said OSCE participating States have committed to respect human rights, the rule of law, international humanitarian law and international human rights law in armed conflict. It also said participating States have committed to respecting the rights of the child and promoting children’s interests in conflict and post-conflict situations.
The report concluded that Ukrainian children had suffered consequences from serious violations affecting identity, family, education, information, freedom of thought and conscience, health, liberty and security of person. The statement also cited the mission’s conclusion that the best interests of the child were disregarded across Russia’s policy.
Stakeholder Comments
Jan Marian, Permanent Representative of the Czech Republic to the OSCE said;
“I am delivering this statement on behalf of 41 participating States that invoked the OSCE Moscow Mechanism in relation to Russia’s indoctrination and militarization of Ukrainian children on 14 May 2026.”
“We are very grateful to the Moscow Mechanism experts for producing such a thorough and professional report. While we are still reviewing the report in detail, it is clear that the mission’s findings confirmed our cause for grave concerns.”
“To the Russian Federation, first and foremost we call on you to stop your war of aggression against Ukraine and withdraw from Ukraine’s internationally recognised territory.”
“The best interests of Ukrainian children, including in the temporarily occupied territories, require that all the recommendations are implemented without any further delay.”
The OSCE Moscow Mechanism report documents allegations concerning the treatment of Ukrainian children in occupied territories and sets out recommendations on family reunification, identity restoration, accountability and child protection. The UK-backed statement supports those findings and calls for implementation of the report’s recommendations through international mechanisms.
Sources: Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and Jan Marian, Permanent Representative of the Czech Republic to the OSCE
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News, an independent news organisation delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analysed research with human-edited accuracy and context.





