BusinessMirror

UN report says Ukraine bears share of blame for nursing home attack

- By Richard Lardner & Beatrice Dupuy

WASHINGTON—TWOWEEKS after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine, Kremlin-backed rebels assaulted a nursing home in the eastern region of Luhansk. Dozens of elderly and disabled patients, many of them bedridden, were trapped inside without water or electricit­y.

The March 11 assault set off a fire that spread throughout the facility, suffocatin­g people who couldn’t move. A small number of patients and staff escaped and fled into a nearby forest, finally getting assistance after walking for 5 kilometers (3 miles).

In a war awash in atrocities, the attack on the nursing home near the village of Stara Krasnyanka stood out for its cruelty. And Ukrainian authoritie­s placed the fault squarely on Russian forces, accusing them of killing more than 50 vulnerable civilians in a brutal and unprovoked attack.

But a new United Nations report has found that Ukraine’s armed forces bear a large, and perhaps equal, share of the blame for what happened in Stara Krasnyanka, which is about 580 kilometers (360 miles) southeast of Kyiv. A few days before the attack, Ukrainian soldiers took up positions inside the nursing home, effectivel­y making the building a target.

At least 22 of the 71 patients survived the assault, but the exact number of people killed remains unknown, according to the UN.

The report by the UN’S Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights doesn’t conclude the Ukrainian soldiers or the Moscowback­ed separatist fighters committed a war crime. But it said the battle at the Stara Krasnyanka nursing home is emblematic of the human rights office’s concerns over the potential use of “human shields” to prevent military operations in certain areas.

The aftermath of the attack on the Stara Krasnyanka home also provides a window into how both Russia and Ukraine move quickly to set the narrative for how events are unfolding on the ground— even when those events may still be shrouded by the fog of war. For Ukraine, maintainin­g the upper hand in the fight for hearts and minds helps to ensure the continued f low of billions of dollars in Western military and humanitari­an aid.

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