Daily Nation Newspaper

UKRAINIAN WIDOW CONFRONTS RUSSIAN SOLDIER ACCUSED OF KILLING HER HUSBAND

- - BBC

INthe very first days of this invasion a 62-year- old unarmed civilian was shot dead on a village street outside his Ukrainian home. His name was Oleksandr Shelipov.

Three months later and the captured Russian soldier ac cused of killing him is in Kyiv being tried for a war crime.

Standing up in court to con front the 21-year-old defendant on Thursday was Kateryna Shelipova, the widow of the man killed.

Did he repent his crime, she asked?

The Russian tank command er, Vadim Shishimari­n, replied that he admitted his guilt and asked for her forgivenes­s. "But I understand you won't be able to forgive me," he added.

Kateryna Shelipova hadn't finished. "Tell me please, why did you [Russians] come here? To protect us?" she asked, citing Vladimir Putin's justificat­ion for the invasion of Ukraine.

“Protect us from whom? Did you protect me from my hus band, whom you killed?”

The soldier had no answer to that.

This landmark trial marks the first time a Russian service man has been put on the stand for war crimes since the inva sion of Ukraine was launched in February.

And perhaps such raw en counters are what such tri als are about, at least in part. Forcing a soldier - who ignored all the rules of war - to face up to exactly what he has done and the suffering he has caused.

Sgt Shishimari­n has pleaded guilty and Ukrainian prosecu tors are asking for him to be sentenced to life imprisonme­nt.

On Wednesday, Ms Shelipova told me she actually felt sorry for the soldier, but she could not forgive him for this crime.

She heard the shots that killed her husband, then saw Sgt Shishimari­n through her gate - holding his weapon.

Five minutes later she says she saw her husband’s body: “He was dead with a shot in his head. I started screaming very loudly.”

“The loss of my husband is everything for me,” Ms Shelipova said, adding: “He was my protector.”

‘It killed him’

Recalling the events of 28 February, Vadim Shishimari­n said he and a small group of other Russian soldiers had be come separated from their unit and hijacked a car in order to return to it.

“As we were driving, we saw a man. He was talking on the phone,” the defendant said.

He claimed that he hadn’t wanted to fire the fatal shots, that he was following orders - threatened by another soldier if he refused to do as he was told.

“He said I would be putting us in danger if I didn’t. I shot him at short range. It killed him,” the 21-year-old tank com mander told the court.

Interestin­gly, his defence lawyer - appointed by the state - told me that no Russian of ficial has been in touch with him, including from its de fence ministry.

There is no Russian embas sy in Kyiv these days, so no contact from there either.

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman yesterday told the BBC that the Kremlin has “no informatio­n” about this case.

All in all, it feels rather like the young soldier has been abandoned to his fate by the commanders who sent him to war and continue to deny that their forces commit crimes here.

We also heard from a second Russian soldier who witnessed

the killing in February and lat er surrendere­d to Ukrainian forces.

Ivan Maltysev, anoth er slight and young-looking 21-year-old, told the court how the Russian soldiers spotted Oleksandr Shelipov while they

were driving the stolen car.

Mr Maltysev claimed that Vadim Shishimari­n was then ordered to shoot the victim be cause he was on the phone.

“Vadim didn’t do it. So the soldier, whose name I don’t know, turned round in the car and shouted that Vadim had to carry out the order, or we would be informed on.

“At this point, we were al most alongside the civilian and, under pressure, Vadim fired. He fired three or four rounds.”

Ukraine has so far identified more than 11,000 possible war crimes committed by Russia.

Moscow has denied its troops have targeted civilians, but investigat­ors have been collecting evidence of possible war crimes to bring before the

Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

This trial is Ukraine’s chance to prove, beyond doubt, that a Russian soldier killed a civilian with no regard for the rules of war. Its prosecutor­s know they are in the spotlight, proceed ing so quickly, and in the mid dle of a war.

That is why they are keen to be as transparen­t and thor ough as possible - so that this is not seen as a show trial, but part of a vital quest for justice.

 ?? ?? Vadim Shishimari­n spoke to the Kyiv court from a glass dock reserved for defendants
Vadim Shishimari­n spoke to the Kyiv court from a glass dock reserved for defendants
 ?? ?? 'What did my husband do to you?' widow Kateryna Shelipova asked the Russian soldier who has pled guilty to his killing
'What did my husband do to you?' widow Kateryna Shelipova asked the Russian soldier who has pled guilty to his killing
 ?? ?? Captive Russian soldier Ivan Maltysev was a witness to the killing and testified before the court
Captive Russian soldier Ivan Maltysev was a witness to the killing and testified before the court

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia