The Columbus Dispatch

Inquiry report accuses Russia of war crimes in Ukraine

- Lori Hinnant and Jamey Keaten

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.

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 Møse, 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 well 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.

Møse, 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.”

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.

 ?? MARTIAL TREZZINI/KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? Erik Møse, chair of the Independen­t Internatio­nal Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, said there is a list of individual­s to hold accountabl­e for human rights violations in Ukraine.
MARTIAL TREZZINI/KEYSTONE VIA AP Erik Møse, chair of the Independen­t Internatio­nal Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, said there is a list of individual­s to hold accountabl­e for human rights violations in Ukraine.

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