A British man has been jailed for 19 years after a Russian court found him guilty of fighting for Ukraine in the country’s Kursk region.
James Scott Rhys Anderson, 22, had been charged with terrorist and mercenary offences and was found guilty after a closed trial.
The court said he was to serve the first five years of his sentence in prison and the remainder in a penal colony.
In the trial, a Ukrainian soldier from the same unit was questioned as a witness.
Ukrainian troops broke across the border into Kursk region on 6 August last year.
They still hold some territory there seven months later, despite attempts by Russian forces to force them out.
Investigators accused Anderson of illegally crossing into Kursk in November as part of an armed group that committed unspecified “criminal acts against civilians”.
Russian state media published video showing him being led in handcuffs and locked in a cage of the kind where defendants in Russian court cases are placed.
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It apparently showed Anderson saying he had served in the British army from 2019-2023 before deciding to join the foreign legion of Ukraine’s armed forces.
Early on in the war, Ukraine’s authorities said more than 20,000 people from 52 countries came to Ukraine’s aid.
Since then, the number of foreign fighters in Ukraine’s military has been classified.