MOSCOW — Russia and Ukraine completed a major prisoner exchange Saturday in a move that raised hopes for eased tensions between the two countries, who have been at war since 2014.
Planes landed almost simultaneously in the countries’ capitals, each carrying 35 prisoners.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that the highly-anticipated swap, which comes after lengthy negotiations, would be “a good step” toward the normalization of relations between Moscow and Kiev.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy made peace between the two countries one of his key election promises when he ran for office earlier this year.
Zelenskiy was at the airport in Kiev to greet the prisoners as they returned home on Saturday.
He said all steps had to be taken “to finish this horrible war.”
Among the Ukrainians freed were 24 sailors who were detained by Russia in the Kerch Strait last November.
Russia accused the sailors of violating its border and kept them in custody for nearly 10 months. Ukraine has insisted that the men should be treated as prisoners of war.
The exchange comes amid calls by President Donald Trump to re-admit Russia to the G-7 after it was kicked out of the group following the annexation of Crimea in 2014.
Five years of war between Ukrainian troops and Russian-backed forces in eastern Ukraine’s Donbass region have killed 13,000 people, despite a ceasefire signed in 2015.
The swap could set the stage for serious talks, even though major differences remain between the two countries.
French President Emmanuel Macron has been pushing for a summit to discuss the issue with Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France.
Russia’s foreign ministry called the exchange “a very important step.”
“We need to support as much as possible this attitude to solve problems, not to aggravate them. Political will and systematic hard work bear fruit,” spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Facebook.
The released prisoners aboard the Russian plane included Kirill Vyshinsky, head of the Russian state news agency RIA-Novosti’s Ukraine branch, who had been jailed since 2018 on treason charges.
They also reportedly included Vladimir Tsemakh, who is suspected of involvement in the downing of a Malaysia Airlines flight over eastern Ukraine in 2014.
Dutch prosecutors previously urged Kiev not to allow Tsemakh to travel to Russia, fearing this could jeopardize the investigation into Flight MH17, which was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.
Tatyana Chistikova reported from Moscow, with Yuliya Talmazan and Linda Givetash from London.
Reuters contributed.