INTERNATIONAL

Europe to launch international commission for Ukraine war damages

Reuters 16/12/2025 | 10:00 MYT
Firefighters work at the site of an apartment building damaged during a Russian drone strike, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine December 16, 2025. - Head of Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration Ivan Fedorov/REUTERS
THE HAGUE, Netherlands: Leaders including Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskiy arrived in The Hague on Tuesday to launch an International Claims Commission to compensate Kyiv for hundreds of billions of dollars in damage from Russian attacks and alleged war crimes.


AI Brief
  • EU and Council of Europe plan a Hague-based commission to compensate victims of Russia's invasion, with 80,000 claims already filed.
  • Debate over including amnesty for war crimes in peace deals complicates efforts to secure justice and reparations.
  • Reconstruction costs estimated at US$524 billion, while frozen Russian assets may fund compensation and rebuilding.


Dozens of senior figures from Europe and beyond, including European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, were attending a one-day conference co-hosted by the Netherlands and the 46-nation Council of Europe, the continent's largest rights group.

The gathering coincided with a U.S.-orchestrated diplomatic pushto end the war in Ukraine that wastriggered by Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Dutch Foreign Minister David van Weel confirmed that the commission would be headquartered in the Netherlands and stressed the importance of reparations for Ukrainian victims.

"Without accountability, a conflict cannot be fully resolved. And part of that accountability is also paying damages that have been done. So I think it's a big step today that we now are establishing a claims commission, that we're signing a treaty on that," Van Weel told reporters upon his arrival.

Details on how any damages awarded by the commission would be paid still need to be worked out, but early discussions included using Russian assets frozen by the EU, supplemented by member contributions.

"The goal is to have validated claims that will ultimately be paid by Russia. It will really have to be paid by Russia, this commission offers no guarantee for the damages," Van Weel said.

The two-year-old Register of Damage, which will become part of the claims commission, has received more than 80,000 claims submitted by individuals, organisations and public bodies in Ukraine under a wide range of categories.

Russian officials were not immediately reachable to comment on the commission. The Kremlin denies accusations of war crimes by Russian forces in Ukraine. It has also described the EU's proposal to use immobilised Russian assets to finance Ukraine's defence and budget needs as illegal and threatened retaliation.

POSSIBLE AMNESTY IN PEACE DEAL

Plans to compensate victims of abuses in Ukraine, ranging from sexual violence and child deportations to the destruction of religious sites, could be complicated by the inclusion of an amnesty for wartime atrocities in any peace deal, earlier proposed by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.

More than 50 states and the EUhave drafted a Council of Europe convention to establish the commission, which will take force after it has been ratified by 25 signatories, as long as sufficient funds have been secured to finance its activity.

More than 35 nations have already indicated support for the commission and were expected to sign the convention at Tuesday's meeting, a source familiar with the discussions said.

The commission - the second part of an international compensation mechanism for Ukraine - will review, assess and decide on claims submitted to the Register of Damage for Ukraine, which was created by the Council of Europe in 2023, and determine compensation awards on a case-by-case basis.

Claims can be filed for damage, loss or injury caused by Russian acts committed in or against Ukraine upon or after the February 24, 2022 invasion. The claims, which cover violations of international law, can be brought by affected individuals, companies or the Ukrainian state, a draft of the proposal said.

$524 BILLION FOR POST-WAR RECONSTRUCTION

The World Bank has estimated the cost of reconstruction in the coming decade at US$524 billion (447 billion euros), or nearly three times Ukraine's economic output in 2024.

But that figure is through December 2024 only and does not include damage caused this year, when Russian drone and missile strikes escalated in a campaign targeting utilities, transport and civilian infrastructure.

The Council of Europe was founded in 1949, four years after the end of World War Two, to promote democracy, human rights and the rule of law across the continent and is its oldest intergovernmental organization.






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