The
Mobile Justice Team, funded by Britain, the EU and the United
States, has been working with Ukrainian war crimes prosecutors
across Ukraine and in Kherson since the city was reclaimed from
Russian forces in November after more than eight months of
occupation.
No comment was immediately available from the Kremlin in
response to a Reuters request.
Reuters reported on the scale of torture chambers in Kherson in
January, when Ukrainian authorities said around 200 people had
allegedly been tortured at 10 locations. Survivors told Reuters
about being tortured, including electric shocks and suffocation
techniques.
At the time, the Kremlin and Russia's defence ministry did not
respond to Reuters' questions, including about alleged torture
and unlawful detentions. Moscow, which has said it is conducting
a "special military operation" in Ukraine, has denied committing
war crimes or targeting civilians.
The mobile team, backed by international experts, is supporting
Ukraine's Office of the Prosecutor General as it reviews more
than 71,000 reports of war crimes nationwide since the Feb. 24,
2022, invasion.
"New evidence collected from recently liberated Kherson reveals
torture chambers were planned and directly financed by the
Russian State," the team, established by British attorney Wayne
Jordash, said in a statement.
Witnesses described the use of electric shock torture and
waterboarding by Russian forces. At least 1,000 torture chamber
survivors have submitted evidence to investigators and more than
400 people had been reported as missing from Kherson, it said.
Funding a network of torture facilities was part of a Russian
state plan to "subjugate, re-educate or kill Ukrainian civic
leaders and ordinary dissenters," the team said.
Torture centres were operated by different Russian security
agencies, including the Russian Federal Security Services (FSB),
local Kherson FSB and the Russian Prison Service, it said.
Reuters was unable to verify the allegations.
An investigation is also underway by the International Criminal
Court, part of a both domestic and international efforts to hold
those responsible for war crimes, crimes against humanity and
genocide across Ukraine to account.
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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