'Hallmarks of genocide' in Russian crimes across Ukraine, Ukrainian
prosecutor says
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[April 02, 2024]
By Anthony Deutsch
THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Ukraine's top prosecutor said on Tuesday that
Russian crimes across occupied Ukrainian territories, including the
Bucha massacres, show a pattern of genocidal behaviour that should be
tried domestically and ultimately by the International Criminal Court.
Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin made the remarks during an interview
with Reuters two years after the mass killing of civilians in the town
of Bucha, shortly after Moscow began its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24,
2022.
More than 125,000 alleged war crimes by Russian forces have been
recorded by Kostin's office, thousands of them in Bucha.
Russia denies its troops have committed war crimes in Ukraine and said
that some events, such as the alleged execution of Ukrainian civilians
in Bucha, were staged. Moscow rejects the ICC's four warrants for top
Russian suspects as meaningless.
Russia says Ukraine has committed war crimes during the conflict, which
Moscow dates from 2014, including the indiscriminate shelling of areas
of eastern Ukraine.
Prosecutors in Ukraine have tried and convicted 25 Russians for war
crimes in the Kyiv region, Kostin said.
"We are convinced that these are not isolated incidents, and from our
point of view, many of them bear hallmarks of genocide," he said.
Kostin said investigations have strengthened the international case for
genocide, with the arrest warrants at the ICC already underpinning war
crimes and more widespread crimes against humanity.
The ICC issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin
for the alleged war crime of the deportation of Ukrainian children to
Russia in 2023. This March, it issued arrest warrants for alleged crimes
against humanity against Russian commanders for strikes against civilian
infrastructure.
Two men have been convicted by Ukrainian courts for inciting genocide,
one for spreading anti-Ukrainian propaganda, including calling for the
drowning of Ukrainian children, but not for an overall plan of genocide
by the leadership being investigated by Kostin.
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Ukraine's Prosecutor General, Andriy Kostin attends an interview at
the ICC, where he will meet Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan, as he
prepares to seek arrest warrants against Russian war crimes suspects
in The Hague, Netherlands March 23, 2023. REUTERS/Piroschka van de
Wouw/ File photo
In both liberated and occupied areas "we see the elements of
genocide in many crimes committed, and we see them as a pattern of
conduct of Russia," Kostin said on the sidelines of a justice
conference in The Hague.
"We have the same type of crimes committed, the same torture
chambers, the same killing, torturing, sexual violence,
ill-treatment, forced illegal detention, forced deportation,
looting. ..And all these crimes were committed by different military
units, and throughout all this period of time," he said.
Taken together, there is now a wider body of evidence to support a
prosecution of genocide, Kostin said, which should go up the chain
of command to Russia's military and political leadership and be
prosecuted in Ukraine and The Hague.
"We can do both, and we will do both with regard to each and every
crime."
The crimes were repeated after Bucha, even once those events were
widely covered by the media, making it impossible for Russian
leaders to later claim they were unaware they were ongoing, Kostin
said.
"We are working on building the big case of genocide," for the sake
of victims and survivors, he said.
"For Ukrainians, it would be very important to see a verdict on
genocide in international courts, but this requires long preparatory
work and very substantial investigation."
(Reporting by Anthony Deutsch; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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