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HomeNewsRussia confirms capture of British man accused of fighting for Ukraine

Russia confirms capture of British man accused of fighting for Ukraine

A Russian court has confirmed a British man who was allegedly fighting for Ukraine has been captured in Russia’s Kursk region.

Video had been circulating online in recent days showing a man dressed in military clothing who identifies himself as James Scott Rhys Anderson, 22, and says he formerly served in the British Army.

A Russian court said it had ordered Mr Anderson be held in custody, alleging he had “participated in hostilities in the territory of the Kursk region”.

Ukraine launched a surprise incursion into the Russian region on 6 August and still holds territory there.

Mr Anderson was identified in court on Monday as being a British citizen from Banbury, Oxfordshire.

The closed-door session heard he is “suspected of committing a set of particularly serious crimes that pose a particular public danger to the public”.

The court added that the decision could be appealed.

Earlier this week, Scott Anderson, Mr Anderson’s father, said he had begged his son not to go to Ukraine.

“He wanted to go out there because he thought he was doing what was right,” Mr Anderson told the Daily Mail.

“I’m hoping he’ll be used as a bargaining chip, but my son told me they torture their prisoners and I’m so frightened he’ll be tortured.”

Mr Anderson said he was sent the video by his son’s commander and was left “in complete shock and tears”.

“I could see straight away it was him. He looks frightened, scared and worried,” he added.

In the video of Mr Anderson first posted to the Telegram messaging platform, he tells a man questioning him from behind a camera that he served as a private in the British Army from 2019 to 2023.

He says he joined the Ukraine’s International Legion – a military unit made up of foreign volunteers – after losing his job and seeing reports on television about the war.

He says he flew to Krakow in Poland from Luton and travelled from there by bus to the Ukrainian border.

Asked about the case earlier this week, Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: “We will do all we can to offer this UK national all the support we can.”

SourceBBC
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