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Russia sentences British prisoner of war to 19 years in a dreadful prison

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Anderson was arrested last autumn by Russian forces (Picture: X)
Anderson was arrested last autumn by Russian forces (Picture: X)

A Russian court has sentenced British soldier James Scott Rhys Anderson to 19 years for ‘illegally invading’ the Kursk region of Russia.

The 22-year-old from Banbury will spend five years in prison and the rest of his sentence in an unidentified maximum security penal colony.

Anderson was arrested by Russian authorities late last year, after travelling from London Luton to Poland, then entering Ukraine to join the fight against Russia.

Speaking at court previously, he said: ‘All the time when I’m in my cell, I’m always thinking about how my mum and dad said: ”Don’t go back, don’t go back”.’

Anderson’s father, Scott Anderson, 41, previously said he worried his son would be tortured.

‘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,’ he told the Mail.

Kursk court sentences foreign mercenary of Ukrainian Armed Forces to 19 years in prison James Scott Rhys Anderson https://www.kursk.kp.ru/daily/27664/5057619/ eiqetidquixrprw

Anderson sat in a holding cell in court and spoke about how his parents warned him not to go back (Picture: Kursk.kp.ru)

A video of Anderson in court appeared to show him saying he served in the British army from 2019-2023.

Metro is contacting Anderson’s family.

Anderson was captured during fighting in Russia’s Kursk region, where Ukrainian troops staged a surprise cross-border incursion last summer.

Last week, three British men who gave their lives in service of Ukraine were among the fallen remembered at a giant art installation in Kyiv.  

Peter Fouché, James Wilton and Callum Tindal-Draper were honoured at the ‘Heart of Ukraine’ in the city’s Southern Railway Station.  

The names of the country’s fallen during the full-scale attack launched by Russia have been displayed since the war’s three-year mark on February 24.  

SUMY, UKRAINE - JANUARY 15: A driver who gave the name Yevhen sits in his vehicle, as Ukrainian Army soldiers use American Bradley Fighting Vehicles during Ukraines on-going cross-border operation into Russias Kursk region, where they have fought both Russians and an estimated contingent of 12,000 North Korean troops, on January 15, 2025 in Sumy, Ukraine. Ukrainian officers of the 4th Company, 1st Battalion, 82nd Separate Air Assault Brigade say that this American military hardware has been crucial to their ability to cross into Russia last August, as well as to Ukraines border defense against Russias all-out invasion in February 2022. Senior Ukrainian commanders and officials have expressed concern that deep U.S. military and financial support will ease up or stop with the incoming Trump Administration, which has stated that it would swiftly end the three-year war. (Photo by Scott Peterson/Getty Images)

Ukraine still controls parts of Kursk, a region in Russia (Picture: Getty)

British ex-soldier James Scott Rhys Anderson

Anderson’s family have expressed worry for his safety (Picture: Family)

Some of the first names to appear on the giant beating heart were employees of the Ukrainian Railways who gave their lives, whether by saving people or by simply doing their job.  

When the war between Russia and Ukraine first broke out, a teenage Queen’s Guard soldier travelled to fight in Ukraine and was arrested after landing back in London.

The teenage soldier breached Ministry of Defence (MoD) orders, going AWOL after it was said he was ‘bored’ with the ceremonial role of his regiment.

His departure caused major panic, with security chiefs urgently trying to intercept the teenager.

 

George MacGregor

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