Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inquiry calls Russian attacks on civilians war crimes

- LORI HINNANT AND JAMEY KEATEN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Adam Pemble of The Associated Press.

GENEVA — Russian attacks against civilians in Ukraine, including systematic torture and killing in occupied regions, amount to war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity, according to a report from a U.N.-backed inquiry released Thursday.

The sweeping human rights report, released a year to the day after a Russian airstrike on a theater in Mariupol killed hundreds sheltering inside, marked a highly unusual condemnati­on of a member of the U.N. Security Council.

At a commemorat­ion Thursday in Kyiv of the theater bombing, dozens of Ukrainians placed flickering candles around a giant, taped Cyrillic inscriptio­n reading “CHILDREN,” an echo of the enormous painted warning that was in place in front of the theater and behind it at the time of the airstrike.

“Those planes that were in the air, I couldn’t believe it until the last minute that they were going to bomb us, peaceful people. You do have mothers and kids; how could you throw those bombs on us? I will never forgive them, never,” said Mariupol resident Nataliia Korchma at Thursday’s commemorat­ion.

Among potential crimes against humanity, the report cited repeated attacks targeting Ukrainian infrastruc­ture since the fall that left hundreds of thousands without heat and electricit­y during the coldest months, as well as the “systematic and widespread” use of torture across multiple regions under Russian occupation.

“There were elements of planning and availabili­ty of resources which indicate that the Russian authoritie­s may have committed torture as crimes against humanity,” said Erik Mose, a former Norwegian Supreme Court and European Court of Human Rights judge who led the investigat­ion.

The investigat­ion also found crimes committed against Ukrainians on Russian territory, including deported Ukrainian children who were prevented from reuniting with their families, a “filtration” system aimed at singling out Ukrainians for detention, and torture and inhumane detention conditions. A commission of inquiry is the most powerful tool used by the U.N.-backed Human Rights Council to scrutinize abuses and violations around the world. The investigat­ion released Thursday was set up during an urgent debate shortly after Russia’s invasion last year.

The commission’s three members are independen­t human rights experts, and its staff gets support and funding from the council and the U.N. human rights office.

The report’s authors noted a “small number” of apparent violations by Ukrainian forces, including one they said was under criminal investigat­ion by Ukrainian authoritie­s, but reserved the vast majority of their report for allegation­s against Russia.

Russia did not respond to the inquiry’s appeals for informatio­n.

Most of the abuses highlighte­d by the investigat­ion were already known, and the report is far from the first to accuse Russia of war crimes. However, the inquiry’s findings come with the imprimatur of the internatio­nal community: The experts work under a mandate overwhelmi­ngly created last year by the Human Rights Council, which brings together the government­s of 47 U.N. member countries.

Mose, who served as president of an internatio­nal tribunal establishe­d to prosecute genocide cases from the massacre of members of Rwanda’s ethnic Tutsi minority in 1994, said investigat­ors have created a list of individual­s to hold accountabl­e for human rights violations in Ukraine.

He said the list would be “submitted to the relevant authoritie­s in this issue,” but the team acknowledg­ed the difficulty of investigat­ions involving a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council.

Ultimately, the report may add to efforts to boost accountabi­lity for crimes committed in the war — whether by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court or by some individual countries that have taken on the right to apply “universal jurisdicti­on” to prosecute atrocities, wherever they may take place.

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