A Russian girl sent to an orphanage after drawing an anti-war picture, for which her father was convicted for discrediting the armed forces, has been collected by her mother who has not lived with the family for at least seven years.
Russia introduced severe punishments for discrediting the nation's armed forces after President Vladimir Putin ordered troops into Ukraine in 2022.
The laws have since snared dissidents, journalists, actors, musicians and comedians — and in this case, a school student's father.
The girl's father, Alexei Moskalyov, was convicted of discrediting the armed forces and given a two-year jail term, leaving his daughter Maria, or Masha in the diminutive, in the hands of the state as her mother, according to legal documents seen by Reuters, had lost all contact with her daughter.
Just hours before a court was due to hold a hearing over the parental rights of the girl's father, Russia's children's rights commissioner, Maria Lvova-Belova, said she had spoken to the girl's mother, Olga, who had collected her from social care.
"Masha did not want to go to her mother at first, and her opinion is legally required to be taken into account. Now her position has changed – she told me this herself on the phone," Ms Lvova-Belova said.
"Olga has already taken Masha from the social rehabilitation centre" she added.
"Let's hope that everything will work out for mum and daughter."
Ms Lvova-Belova, who was recently the subject of an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court, posted a picture of the girl and her mother sitting on a bed, looking into each other's eyes. Both were smiling.
"I am glad about the beginning of the reunion of daughter and mother," Ms Lvova-Belova said.
It was not immediately clear why Maria's mother had not lived with the family for so long. Official custody documents from earlier in the year showed her mother uses a different surname.
'No to Putin, no to war'
The problems for Mr Moskalyov began after his daughter drew a picture in a school art class last year that featured Russian missiles flying towards Ukraine, along with the slogans "Glory to Ukraine" and "No to Putin, no to war".
Secondary School Number 9 in Yefremov, 290 kilometres south of Moscow, alerted the police who discussed the matter with both Mr Moskalyov and his daughter, then 12.
More ominously, officers from the Federal Security Service (FSB), the main successor to the Soviet-era Committee for State Security (KGB), also spoke to both father and daughter, Mr Moskalyov's lawyer told Reuters.
Shortly afterwards, social services got involved and Mr Moskalyov was accused of poor parenting and fined.
He was then accused of discrediting the Russian armed forces in social media posts, although he said his account had been hacked.
On March 1, he was detained and the next day a court placed him under house arrest. Maria was taken away and put into a children's home, despite a request from a detective that she be returned home.
Mr Moskalyov went on the run and was arrested in Minsk.
While on the run, he was sentenced in absentia to two years in a penal colony for discrediting the armed forces.
Reuters/ABC