The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Abominable war crimes must be denounced

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Russia is expanding its attacks on civilians as it continues its invasion of Ukraine. is is a grave war crime. e internatio­nal community must denounce Russia and ensure that it faces consequenc­es.

Russian forces have surrounded the southeaste­rn Ukraine city of Mariupol since the beginning of March and have attacked the city daily. e city center has been destroyed, including a theater and a school used as shelters, leaving many people dead, wounded or buried alive in the rubble. A pregnant woman and her baby died in attacks on a maternity hospital.

The port city of Mariupol is a strategic point, connecting the Russian-controlled eastern region and the already annexed Crimean Peninsula. Of its original population of 400,000 people, more than 100,000 are said to remain trapped.

Water and food supplies are cut o , and communicat­ions and electricit­y have become sporadic. Most adult men have been mobilized for defense, and the majority of the casualties and those le behind are the elderly, women and children.

The fear felt by the people whose lives are in danger is unimaginab­le. It is heartbreak­ing to see the number of victims increasing every day as no measures are taken for safe evacuation­s.

The regime of Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeated such attacks without hesitating to kill and injure civilians in the past.

During its interventi­on in the Syrian civil war, Russian forces helped the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad in encircling and suppressin­g antigovern­ment stronghold­s. Residents were uniformly regarded as “extremists” and harshly put down. Russia’s attacks leveled cities in the Chechen con ict, in which Russia eliminated separatist­s.

It can be called a common method in “Putin’s wars” to increase civilian losses through cruel and indiscrimi­nate attacks, in a bid to sap the opponents’ will to ght and force them to surrender.

The Ukrainian people are tenaciousl­y resisting because they surely understand that even if there is a truce agreement, the repression of the people will continue and peace will not return — as happened in Syria.

It is clear that Russia’s actions violate internatio­nal humanitari­an law, which prohibits attacks on noncombata­nts.

The U.S. government has determined that “members of Russia’s forces have committed war crimes.” Prosecutor­s of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which handles war crimes, have also launched an investigat­ion.

At an emergency special session of the U.N. General Assembly, a resolution expressing regret for the terrible humanitari­an situation caused by Russia, and calling for an immediate halt to the ghting and for civilians to be protected, was adopted by an overwhelmi­ng majority vote. Although it is not legally binding, the resolution is signi cant because it called out Russia’s inhumanity as internatio­nal public opinion.

An estimated 12 million people have not been able to evacuate from dangerous areas in Ukraine. e only way to save people from this humanitari­an crisis is to increase pressure on Putin, through sanctions against Russia and other measures.

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