The Ukrainian government has said a scheme it created for Russian soldiers to surrender is getting up to 100 enquiries a day.
The “I Want To Live” project was started in September.
By calling a hotline or entering details through messenger apps, Russian troops can arrange the best way to surrender to Ukrainian forces.
Officials in Kyiv say they’ve had more than 3,500 contacts from invading personnel, as well as their families.
There’s been an apparent increase since Russian President Vladimir Putin mobilised hundreds of thousands of Russian men, and since the city of Kherson was liberated.
The BBC has been given recordings from some of the calls.
As the dark hallways suggest, Ukraine’s headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War isn’t immune to the power blackouts which plague the country.
In a small office we meet Svitlana, not her real name, a Ukrainian call handler who speaks to Russian soldiers daily.
They can either get in touch over the phone or on most messenger apps, such as Telegram and WhatsApp.
She explains the evenings are busiest, when troops have more spare time and can sneak off and make a call.
“First of all, we hear a voice, mainly male,” she explains. “It’s often part-desperate, part-frustrated, because they don’t fully understand how the hotline works, or whether it’s just a set-up.
“There’s also curiosity because many call not to surrender but to find out how they could if needed. It’s different every time.”
Svitlana isn’t allowed to tell us how many Russians she’s helped, or exactly how it happens. They’re just told to share their location before being given further instructions.
Some Russian soldiers also get in touch to provoke them, she says, although she doesn’t think all of them believe the Kremlin’s baseless claims that Ukraine is run by Nazis.
“We can’t judge an entire country,” she says. “The majority of them are worried about their lives.”
Svitlana also recalls a call from one man who lived in occupied Crimea and had been mobilised to fight against his own family, and country.
It seems Moscow has now blocked the phone numbers from being reached inside Russia. Calls from either a UK or Russian Sim card are greeted with an error message.
Source: BBC