Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

With territory regained, crime scene investigat­ors move in

- By Isabelle Khurshudya­n

TSYRKUNY, Ukraine — To get to the crime scene, the police investigat­ors drove about 30 minutes northeast of downtown Kharkiv — past neighborho­ods in ruins, destroyed Russian military vehicles, a field littered with blast craters, and plumes of dark smoke rising a few miles in the distance, where fighting between the Ukrainian and Russian militaries was ongoing.

The Ukrainians had expelled Russian forces from the town of Tsyrkuny, less than 20 miles from the Russian

border, just three days earlier — part of a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive that has reclaimed a significan­t swath of territory in the Kharkiv region this month.

Now the police investigat­ors were eager to visit the village, where they had a report of two civilian bodies lying on the side of a dirt road. The women had been killed by a Russian land mine weeks earlier, the police said. Andjust as forensic scientists would visit the site of a killing in prewar times to collect evidence, they needed to do the same here in their quest to gather evidence of potential Russian war crimes.

The catch: The area was still covered in booby traps and tripwires rigged to land mines, and Russia’s military positions were close enough that a reconnaiss­ance drone could fly by at any moment and make everyone working on the ground a target for artillery bombardmen­t.

It all underscore­d a new reality for Kharkiv and other parts of eastern Ukraine, where the war with Russia is now concentrat­ed. Even places where Ukraine’s military has made recent gains remain perilous and largely uninhabita­ble. Ridding them of deadly mines is a painstakin­g process — and there’s no guarantee the Russians won’t have regrouped for another offensive here by the timeit’s completed.

“We have to understand that the Kharkiv region will never be the same as it was before,” Oleh Synyehubov, the region’s governor, told the Washington Post.

“To push them all the way to the borders of the Kharkiv region, of course we’re going to try to do it, but it will be extremely difficult. Why? Because at that point, they will be shooting at our troops from their territory,”

he said. “Right now, we’re defending ourselves on our territory. But that would be a different story — it would mean attacking the Russian territory.”

The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, assessed that the Ukrainian counteroff­ensive north of Kharkiv has possibly closed to within 7 miles of the Russian border and “will likely continue to divert Russian troops and resources from deployment to other axes of advance where fighting has been similarly stalled out by the successful Ukrainian defense.”

The analysts added that the Russians are “unlikely to launch operations to retake the northeast outskirts of Kharkiv liberated by Ukrainian forces in the near future.” They said that was partly because the Russians

had reportedly destroyed three bridges as part of their retreat, something armies do only when they’ve decided they won’t try to cross in the other direction again any time soon.

Mr. Synyehubov is less optimistic. He doesn’t anticipate that Russia will pull back its troops entirely, as it did in the suburbs around Kyiv and in the Chernihiv region in the north. If it did, he said, that would enable Ukraine to send more forces to strategica­lly important Izyum, a town on the southeaste­rn edge of Kharkiv that the Russians must capture if they plan to encircle Ukraine’s military in the eastern Donbas region.

He has urged residents not to try returning to their homes in villages that were occupied by Russians until recently.

In Tsyrkuny, the military didn’t even let the police in until Tuesday. Before departing for the village, Serhii Bolvinov, the head of Kharkiv’s police investigat­ion department, warned his investigat­ors and forensic scientists: “Do not step on the grass.”

“Look for wires at your feet — and higher, too,” Mr. Bolvinov continued, speaking to his investigat­ors and the Post journalist­s accompanyi­ng them. “Look for them in every direction. And just be very careful.”

Imagine an episode of “CSI” — and there’s a war going on, too. The police had a rough understand­ing of where the corpses were located, but just getting to them took hours as sappers — technician­s who clear mines — made sure the path was safe. The booms of incoming artillery sounded closer and closer, and one soldier warned the investigat­ors to move to somewhere less exposed — except that the only place to go was into the forest, where there was the danger ofhidden explosives.

While the de-mining crew was still carefully moving detection wands through the grass and spiking them into the ground, 83-year-old Oleksandr Sahno walked by. He had spent nearly every night in a neighbor’s basement during the Russian occupation. Now he was hoping to finally be reunited with his son in the city and was on his way to a meetup point.

The police asked him to stay near their car until they were finished working; they couldn’t risk his running into Russian soldiers on the way and revealing their positions. Mr. Sahno reluctantl­y agreed.

The scariest part of living under occupation, he said, was the last three days of it, when Ukrainian forces moved closer and firefights broke out in the village. Mr. Sahno had been working in his potato garden then, and an artillery shell landed just 150 feet away. He clumsily ran for cover as the roof of a house on his street collapsed in front of him.

“I never doubted our guys would come,” he said. “If anything, I didn’t think it would take so long.”

After nearly two hours, a safe path had been created for the forensic investigat­ors to collect evidence around the corpses. Without touching the bodies, they took photograph­s, observing that the women were wearing leisure wear and didn’t have any bags with them. They had probably been out for a walk when they hit a tripwire rigged to an anti-personnel mine.

The back of one woman’s head had been completely blown off, and her face was charred and mangled. The bodies of two dogs were also discovered; they might have triggered a different mine later.

Placing down numbered yellow markers, the police took photos of the fragments of the two land mines they discovered, a MON-50 and POM-2. They bagged the pieces and some wire to eventually hand over to Ukraine’s Security Service — evidence for future war-crimes cases. The weapons can be used to identify who committed the crimes, as can any traces of DNA on them.

Andrii Sharnin, the deputy chief of Kharkiv’s police investigat­ion department, said Ukraine is steadily creating a database of Russian soldiers’ DNA — either through the Russian corpses the country has recovered or the troops it has captured.

“Eventually — whether in two days or in two years — we’ll be able to determine the specific person who planted this mine,” Deputy Chief Sharnin said.

Nervous about how long they’d already been at the site, the investigat­ors hurriedly packed the evidence into their van and sped back toward the city. Oleksandr Bogdanov powered on his phone for the first time in hours. He’d been the one examining the bodies closest — not that his mother needed to know the dangerous places his job takes him these days.

“Sorry, I didn’t have good service in the bunker,” he told her in a call. “We’ve just been doing paperwork down here.”

 ?? Wojciech Grzedzinsk­i/The Washignton Post ?? Criminolog­ist Oleksandr Bogdanov, left, and Bogdan Burgelo, head of the forensic support department, prepare the scene in Tsyrkuny, Ukraine, where the bodies of two women had been found. Police say the women had been killed by a Russian land mine.
Wojciech Grzedzinsk­i/The Washignton Post Criminolog­ist Oleksandr Bogdanov, left, and Bogdan Burgelo, head of the forensic support department, prepare the scene in Tsyrkuny, Ukraine, where the bodies of two women had been found. Police say the women had been killed by a Russian land mine.

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