Home World Australia After defending Ukraine, Oscar Jenkins received a 13-year sentence in a Soviet...

After defending Ukraine, Oscar Jenkins received a 13-year sentence in a Soviet jail.

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SOURCE :- THE AGE NEWS

London: Australian man Oscar Jenkins has been sentenced to 13 years in a Russian maximum-security prison after being convicted of fighting as a mercenary alongside Ukrainian forces.

The 33-year-old from Melbourne, captured in December last year while serving in Ukraine’s military, was found guilty by a court in the Russian-controlled Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine.

Australian man Oscar Jenkins, 33, was jailed in a Russia-controlled court in Luhansk on FridayCredit: Prosecutor’s Office of the Luhansk People’s Republic

Russian authorities claimed Jenkins, a former biology teacher, was paid up to 800,000 rubles ($15,000) a month to participate in military operations against their troops.

The court ruling, delivered on Friday, classified Jenkins’s actions as mercenary activity, meaning he was not entitled to prisoner-of-war protections under international law. He was ordered to be transferred to “a strict regime penal colony”.

Prosecutors claimed that Jenkins arrived in Ukraine in February 2024 and fought against Russian forces in the Donbas region until his capture later that year. The Kremlin maintain that foreign fighters in Ukraine are mercenaries, subject to criminal prosecution rather than the protections afforded to prisoners of war under the Geneva Convention.

Jenkins was filmed in December 2024 after his capture, bound and subjected to harsh interrogation by Russian forces. In the video, which was widely circulated online, he was slapped and questioned about his role in the conflict and whether he was being paid to fight. The footage prompted international outrage and raised concerns over the treatment of foreign nationals in Russian custody.

Following reports that Jenkins had been killed while in captivity, the Australian government summoned the Russian ambassador in January to demand clarification. However, new videos emerged in February showing Jenkins alive but visibly frail and possibly suffering from a broken arm. His appearance led to further concerns about his wellbeing while under Russian detention.

The Australian government has repeatedly called for Jenkins to be treated as a prisoner of war and afford protections. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said last month his government would continue to make representations to the “reprehensible regime” of Vladimir Putin on behalf of Jenkins.

“We will stand up and use whatever avenues we have at our disposal to continue to make those representations,” he said.

In April, Jenkins was formally charged with mercenary activity, and videos were released showing him in court, standing in a glass cage, his hands behind his back and his expression despondent.

The prosecution argued that he had signed a contract with the Ukrainian Defence Ministry, offering him substantial compensation for his services in the war against Russia.

Human rights groups have voiced concerns over the legality and fairness of the trial, and there is speculation that Jenkins could be part of a prisoner exchange between Russia and Australia.

The Russian branch of the International Committee for the Protection of Human Rights has previously that Jenkins might be released as part of a swap involving Russian spies Kira and Igor Korolev, as well as pro-Putin activist Simeon Boikov – also known as the “Aussie Cossack” – who two years ago sought refuge in Sydney’s Russian consulate to avoid an assault charge for which he was convicted in absentia.

Jenkins’s sentencing follows the conviction in March of British national James Scott Rhys Anderson, who was sentenced to 19 years in a Russian military court for his involvement in the conflict. Anderson’s conviction marked the first such sentence for a British national since the start of the war.

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has been approached for comment.

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