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		U.N. rights office cites growing evidence of war crimes in Ukraine
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		 [April 22, 2022] 
		ZURICH (Reuters) - The United 
		Nations human rights office said on Friday there was growing evidence of 
		Russian war crimes in Ukraine, including signs of indiscriminate 
		shelling and summary executions, while it said Ukraine also appeared to 
		have used weapons with indiscriminate effects. 
 "Russian armed forces have indiscriminately shelled and bombed populated 
		areas, killing civilians and wrecking hospitals, schools and other 
		civilian infrastructure, actions that may amount to war crimes," the 
		office of U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Michelle 
		Bachelet said.
 
 U.N. human rights monitors in Ukraine have also documented what appeared 
		to be the use of weapons with indiscriminate effects, causing civilian 
		casualties, by Ukrainian armed forces in the east of the country, OHCHR 
		said in a statement.
 
 Russia, which describes its incursion as a "special military operation" 
		to disarm and "denazify" Ukraine, denies targeting civilians or 
		committing any such war crimes.
 
 The OHCHR said that from the start of the war on Feb. 24 until April 20, 
		monitors in Ukraine had verified 5,264 civilian casualties - 2,345 
		killed and 2,919 injured.
 
		
		 
		Of these, 92.3% were recorded in government-controlled territory and 
		7.7% in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions controlled by Russian armed 
		forces and affiliated groups, it added.  
		"We know the actual numbers are going to be much higher as the horrors 
		inflicted in areas of intense fighting, such as Mariupol, come to 
		light," Bachelet said. 
		"The scale of summary executions of civilians in areas previously 
		occupied by Russian forces are also emerging. The preservation of 
		evidence and decent treatment of mortal remains must be ensured, as well 
		as psychological and other relief for victims and their relatives," she 
		added. 
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			Bodies waiting to be identified by their families, amid Russia's 
			invasion of Ukraine, are seen outside the morgue in Bucha, Kyiv 
			region, Ukraine April 20,2022. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra 
            
			 During a mission to Bucha on April 
			9, U.N. human rights officers documented the unlawful killing, 
			including by summary execution, of around 50 civilians, it said. 
 They have received more than 300 allegations of killings of 
			civilians in the regions of Kyiv, Chernihiv, Kharkiv and Sumy, all 
			under the control of Russian armed forces in late February and early 
			March, it added.
 
 Monitors were looking into allegations of sexual violence by members 
			of the Russian armed forces, and reports that both sides were 
			improperly detaining civilians, it said.
 
 However, asked about allegations of genocide - including by U.S. 
			President Joe Biden - spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani said OHCHR had 
			not found information to back this up.
 
 "A lot of these legal qualifications - crimes against humanity and 
			genocide - at the end of the day would be for a court of law to 
			determine but, no, we have not documented patterns that could amount 
			to that," she told an online briefing in Geneva.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Hugh 
			Lawson)
 
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