![Olena Pekh is one of 10 Ukrainians who have returned to Kyiv after being held prisoner in Russia. (AP PHOTO) Olena Pekh is one of 10 Ukrainians who have returned to Kyiv after being held prisoner in Russia. (AP PHOTO)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/53cb17a3-e4e1-4fc9-97ca-65ded3c28ccd.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Ten Ukrainians held prisoner for years have been released from Russian captivity with the mediation of the Vatican, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy says.
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Part of the group arrived by helicopter overnight at Kyiv International Airport, which has been closed since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine.
It was the first time the airport received passengers in more than two years.
The rest of the group arrived by bus.
Some of the released civilians had been captured before Russia's invasion.
It's a rare occasion when people detained after 2014, when Russia illegally annexed the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, were released.
Among the freed was Nariman Dzhelyal, deputy head of the Mejlis, a representative body of Crimean Tatars that was relocated to Kyiv after Russia seized the peninsula.
He was taken from Crimea, where he lived despite the annexation, one year before the war.
"I was in captivity, where many Ukrainians remain," he said.
"We cannot leave them there because the conditions, both psychological and physical, are very frightening there."
In the main hall of the airport, where pre-war advertisements still hang, former prisoners wrapped in blue and yellow flags reunited with their families and called those who could not be there.
For some, the separation had lasted many years.
"I really want to hug you," said Isabella Pekh, the daughter of freed art historian Olena Pekh, through a video call.
"I'll be with you soon, Mummy.
"I'm so sorry I couldn't meet you."
For almost six years, Isabella Pekh spoke at international conferences and appealed to foreign ambassadors for help in freeing her mother, who was detained in the occupied part of the Donetsk region.
Eventually, her efforts succeeded.
"It was six years of hell that words cannot describe but I knew I had my homeland, I had people who loved me, I had my daughter," said Olena Pekh.
Two priests were also among those who returned on Friday.
One of them, Bohdan Heleta, was detained in 2022 inside his church in the occupied city of Berdiansk in the Zaporizhzhia region.
According to Ukraine's Co-ordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War, 3310 Ukrainians have already been released from Russian captivity.
Still, many thousands - both civilians and military personnel - remain imprisoned.
Australian Associated Press