US ballerina Ksenia Karelina kisses boyfriend as she FINALLY returns home escaping 12-year prison sentence in Putin jail

US BALLERINA Ksenia Karelina has been reunited with her boyfriend after finally being released from her Russian prison hell.

Karelina was hit with a 12-year jail sentence over a £40 donation to charity before being freed this week as part of a prisoner exchange.

Ksenia Karelina kissing her fiancé, boxer Chris van Heerden.
AP

Ksenia Karelina kisses her fiancé, professional boxer Chris van Heerden, after arriving home overnight[/caption]

A ballerina and her boyfriend embrace upon her release from a Russian prison.
AFP

The happy couple were all smiles after they were finally back together[/caption]

Ksenia Karelina, a Russian-American dual citizen, smiling and holding flowers upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews.
Reuters

Ksenia was greeted by her loved ones after being imprisoned in Russia months for months[/caption]

Ballerina leaping on a bridge.
East2West

Ballerina Karelina was facing over a decade behind bars[/caption]

A plane carrying Karelina landed in Washington late on Thursday night as she was greeted by her emotional family.

Boyfriend and martial artist Chris van Heerden was among the first to hug Karelina as the pair shared a kiss as those around them cheered.

A bouquet of pink flowers were handed over to the beaming American.

Karelina had been in a Russian jail since last year after pleading guilty to treason after donating just £40 to a pro-Ukraine charity which had links to the military.

The ballerina and aesthetician was visiting family in Russia last January when she was snatched by the FSB and detained.

She was later seen in footage released by Russia handcuffed and with a beanie over her eyes as she awaited a hearing.

But after months behind bars, Karelina was finally allowed to leave her jail cell as she was handed over to the US as part of a prisoner exchange deal in Abu Dhabi.

Russia were handed Arthur Petrov, a dual German-Russian citizen, in return.

He was arrested in 2023 for allegedly exporting sensitive microelectronics.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe and a senior Russian intelligence official arranged the deal, according to a CIA official.

After greeting Karelina in the Middle East, Ratcliffe released a statement where he praised both Donald Trump, the United Arab Emirates government and the CIA for securing the release of the ballerina.

Ksenia Karelina greeting her fiancé, boxer Chris van Heerden, at Joint Base Andrews.
AP

Karelina runs to her fiancé after landing in Washington[/caption]

Ksenia Karelina, a U.S.-Russian dual national, released from Russian custody, boarding a private plane.
Rex

The ballerina boarding a plane to the US after finally being granted her freedom[/caption]

A U.S.-Russian dual national shakes hands with the CIA Director at an airport following her release from Russian custody.
Alamy

CIA Director John Ratcliffe at an airport in Abu Dhabi with Karelina[/caption]

Images from before her plane took off from Saudi shows Karelina and Ratcliffe sharing a warm embrace before she boarded the private jet.

The latest in a range of prisoner exchanges between the US and Russia in recent months comes as the two nations continue to grow closer to securing peace in Ukraine.

Despite the latest swap being a success a CIA spokesperson was clear that the US will continue to apply pressure on Moscow to release all US citizens imprisoned.

They announced: “The exchange shows the importance of keeping lines of communication open with Russia, despite the deep challenges in our bilateral relationship.

“While we are disappointed that other Americans remain wrongfully detained in Russia, we see this exchange as a positive step and will continue to work for their release.”

Karelina’s case was heard by the same court that wrongfully convicted Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich of espionage in July.

Gershkovich was finally freed after being held by the Russian government for 491 days last year.

He was wrongfully detained in March 2023 while working as a journalist in the Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg.

Russian President Vladimir Putin accused him of spying for the US and he was convicted during a sham trial last month.

He faced up to 16 years in a Russian prison.

But the journalist finally journeyed home with two other Americans unfairly held in Russia as part of a similar prisoner swap deal.

Russian-American editor for Radio Free Europe, Alsu Kurmasheva, 47, and former US Marine Paul Whelan, 54, accompanied Evan in his release from Russian custody.

American school teacher Marc Fogel was also released from a Russian prison after being jailed over trumped-up drug charges in February.

Fogel, 63, was arrested at an airport in 2021 for the illegal possession of a small amount of medical cannabis and slapped with a 14-year sentence.

Fogel was finally freed from captivity after a meeting with President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff in Moscow today.

Woman seen through glass, wearing a plaid shirt.
AP

Karelina during her hearing as she pleaded guilty[/caption]

Woman in beige dress holding citizenship certificate between two American flags.
East2West

Karelina became a United States citizen in 2021 and had been living in Los Angeles, California before her arrest[/caption]

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