Russian forces killed hundreds of civilians early in Ukraine war -UN
report
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[December 07, 2022]
By Michael Shields
ZURICH (Reuters) -Russian forces killed at least 441 civilians in the
early days of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, the United Nations human
rights office said on Wednesday, documenting attacks in dozens of towns
and summary executions that it said might be war crimes.
The actual number of victims in the Kyiv, Chernihiv and Sumy regions was
likely to be much higher, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR) said in a report looking into the invasion's start on
Feb. 24 until early April, when Russian forces withdrew from the three
areas.
"The acts in question were committed by Russian armed forces in control
of these areas and led to the deaths of 441 civilians (341 men, 72
women, 20 boys and 8 girls)," the report said.
"There are strong indications that the summary executions documented in
the report constitute the war crime of wilful killing," U.N. High
Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said in a statement.
Through the United Nations Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU),
OHCHR gathered evidence from 102 towns and villages.
The Russian foreign and defence ministries did not immediately respond
to requests for comment.
Moscow has repeatedly denied targeting civilians in what it calls a
"special military operation" to disarm its neighbour and remove
dangerous nationalists from power. Ukraine and its Western allies call
the attack an unprovoked land grab.
Overall in the war through Dec. 4, the OHCHR said it had counted 6,702
civilian deaths, and that its monitoring includes violations by all
parties.
The scope of the new report was limited to the Russian-controlled areas
during the first days of fighting because of "the prevalence of
allegations of killings of civilians in these three regions", and
OHCHR's ability to verify and document deaths there after Russian forces
pulled out.
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Serhii
Lahovskyi, 26, mourns next to the grave of his friend Ihor
Lytvynenko, who according to residents was killed by Russian
soldiers, after they found him beside a building's basement, amid
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Bucha, Kyiv region, Ukraine, April
6, 2022. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
A U.N. commission concluded in October that Russian forces were
responsible for the vast majority of rights violations in the early
days of the war.
Many of the bodies documented in the new report bore signs that the
victims might have been intentionally killed, the report found. As
of the end of October, OHCHR was still trying to corroborate an
additional 198 alleged killings of civilians in the three regions at
the time.
Some areas took the brunt of the killings, the report found, such as
the town of Bucha near the capital Kyiv, which was under control of
Russian troops from March 5 until March 30.
OHCHR said it had documented the killings of 73 civilians in Bucha
and was in the process of corroborating another 105 cases.
SUMMARY EXECUTIONS
A stated objective of the report is to help victims by documenting
the casualties and trying to bring perpetrators to justice. It
analysed 100 of the killings in detail.
It classified 57 of those as summary executions, 30 of which were of
people in detention, while 27 were victims executed on the spot.
In the other 43 cases, civilians were killed while moving within or
between settlements on foot or by bicycle, car or van.
"Most victims were targeted while commuting to work, delivering food
to others, visiting neighbours or relatives, or while attempting to
flee the hostilities," it said.
(Reporting by Michael Shields; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Mark
Heinrich)
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