Daily Mirror

Russia ‘has snatched 200,000 Ukraine kids’

Prosecutor­s’ new war crime probe

- BY CHRIS HUGHES Defence and Security Editor c.hughes@mirror.co.uk @defencechr­is

WAR Crimes investigat­ors have launched a “genocide” case against Russia over fears that more than 200,000 children have been forcibly deported across the border.

Legal experts say “forcibly transferri­ng children” may be genocide as it plays a part in trying to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

Ukraine’s prosecutor general Iryna Venediktov­a said: “From the first days of the war, we started this case about genocide. That’s why this forcible transfer of children is very important.”

Ukraine human rights ombudswoma­n Lyudmyla Denisova has said Moscow had relocated over 210,000 kids to Russia during the conflict, among 1.2 million deportees. The Genocide Convention – adopted by the UN after the Holocaust – specifies five acts of genocide: killing members of a group, causing serious bodily or mental harm, imposing destructiv­e conditions, preventing births, and forcibly transferri­ng children.

Ms Venediktov­a said investigat­ions are focused on the regions of Mykolaiv and Kherson on the southern coast but fighting is hindering evidence collection.

Other alleged Russian war crimes are being probed in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Lviv, Sumy and Zhytomyr, including the targeting of civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture, rape, torture, and extra-judicial killings.

Ms Venediktov­a said Ukraine has identified more than 600 Russian suspects and launched prosecutio­ns against about 80, some prisoners of war.

Genocide has only been proven in internatio­nal courts for conflicts in Bosnia, Rwanda and Cambodia. But experts say there is mounting evidence to support a case in Ukraine, including a pattern of atrocities that meet rigorous tests to prove genocidal intent.

Melanie O’Brien, president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Genocide Scholars, said: “They should absolutely focus on the forcible transfer of children. “We definitely see a risk of genocide.” Ukraine’s defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov said the Kremlin is trying to move the war into a “protracted phase” by building layered defences in the south of the country, instead of advancing.

It is feared Russia has almost taken the entire key city of Severodone­tsk, marking a victory in the region of Luhansk.

The Donetsk region will not fall soon, but needs the world to supply more weapons, its governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said. Russian troops are just nine miles north of Sloviansk, the second biggest Ukrainian-controlled city in Donetsk.

Seizing the regions of Donetsk and neighbouri­ng Luhansk is a key Russian objective. Just under half of Donetsk is still in Ukrainian hands.

Mr Kyrylenko said: “I am sure that they will not advance quickly. In the longer term, it all depends on the concentrat­ion of our forces. The world must do even more.”

 ?? ?? LEFT IN RUINS Man’s home shelled in Kyiv region
LEFT IN RUINS Man’s home shelled in Kyiv region

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