Amnesty says evidence shows Russian troops committed war crimes near
Kyiv
Send a link to a friend
[May 06, 2022] By
Jonathan Landay
KYIV, Ukraine (Reuters) -Amnesty
International said on Friday there was compelling evidence that Russian
troops had committed war crimes, including extrajudicial executions of
civilians, when they occupied an area outside Ukraine's capital in
February and March.
Civilians also suffered abuses such as "reckless shootings and torture"
at the hands of Russian forces during their failed onslaught on Kyiv in
the early stages of the invasion launched by the Kremlin on Feb. 24, the
rights group said in a report.
"These are not isolated incidents. These are very much part of a pattern
wherever Russian forces were in control of a town or a village,"
Donatella Rovera, Amnesty's senior crisis response adviser, told a news
conference in Kyiv.
Information collected by the group "can be used, hopefully, for holding
the perpetrators to account, if not today, one day in the future", she
said.
Russia, which calls its invasion a "special operation" to disarm Ukraine
and protect it from fascists, denies its forces committed abuses. Kyiv
and its Western backers say the fascism claim is a false pretext for an
unprovoked war of aggression.
Ukrainian authorities say they are investigating more than 9,000
potential war crimes by Russian troops. The International Criminal Court
is also looking into alleged war crimes.
The Amnesty report is the latest to document alleged war crimes
committed by Russian forces when they occupied an area northwest of
Kyiv, including the town of Bucha, where Ukrainian authorities say more
than 400 civilians were killed. Moscow withdrew its troops in early
April.
'UNLAWFUL KILLINGS'
The report concluded that Russian troops had committed a "host of
apparent war crimes" in Bucha, including "numerous unlawful killings",
most of them near the intersection of Yablunska and Vodoprovidna
streets.
[to top of second column]
|
Oleksiy Sokolyuk, 50, talks on the phone as he stands inside his
house, that according to him was destroyed by shelling, the first on
March 5, and the second on March 17, amid Russian invasion of
Ukraine, in Irpin, outside Kyiv, Ukraine May 4, 2022. REUTERS/Zohra
Bensemra
A Reuters investigation published on Thursday
documented clues, including testimony and evidence focused on
Yablunska Street, to the identities of individual Russian soldiers
and military units present in Bucha.
The units included the 76th Guards Air Assault
Division, which the Amnesty report also found was present in the
town.
Rovera said she collected in Bucha armour-piercing bullets and shell
casings produced at a plant in Tula, south of Moscow, for rifles
used only by elite Russian airborne units whose presence in Bucha
Amnesty had confirmed.
"We also found and were able to view some military documents that
indicate the presence of these special units in these places where
these crimes were committed," she said.
Amnesty said it had documented 22 cases of unlawful killing by
Russian forces - "most of which were apparent extrajudicial
executions" - in Bucha and nearby areas.
Asked by Reuters before the Amnesty report about Russia's operation
in Bucha, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "The Bucha story is
a set-up and a fake".
Amnesty also said in its report Russian airstrikes that hit eight
residential buildings on March 1-2 in the town of Borodyanka,
killing at least 40 civilians, were "disproportionate and
indiscriminate, and apparent war crimes".
"Russian forces cannot credibly claim to have been unaware that
civilians were living in the targeted buildings," it said.
(Reporting by Jonathan LandayEditing by Gareth Jones)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |