Manawatu Standard

Azovstal fighters may face trial as criminals

- Times The

The last defenders of Mariupol were taken to a Russian prison colony Tuesday where they faced trial as ‘‘Nazi war criminals’’.

More than 260 fighters, some of them seriously wounded and carried on stretchers, ended weeks of resistance in the bunkers and tunnels below the Azovstal plant when the most devastatin­g siege of Russia’s war drew to a close.

Seven buses carrying the fighters took them to a former penal colony in the Russiancon­trolled town of Olenivka near Donetsk, Reuters said.

The Tass news agency said the Investigat­ive Committee of Russia, equivalent to the FBI, planned to question the soldiers, many of them members of the Azov Battalion, as part of an investigat­ion into what Moscow calls ‘‘Ukrainian regime crimes’’.

Ukraine compared the fighters to the Spartans and said they had changed the course of the war by holding back thousands of Russian troops and giving their soldiers critical time to prepare and build defensive positions elsewhere.

The fall of Azovstal – nearly three months after the war began – allowed the complete capture of the port city by the Russians in what they will see as a big strategic success.

Hanna Maliar, a Ukrainian deputy defence minister, said the troops would be swapped in a prisoner exchange. However, some Russian officials said they should be tried or even executed.

Vyacheslav Volodin, one of Russia’s most powerful officials and speaker of the state Duma, Russia’s lower house of parliament, said: ‘‘Nazi criminals should not be exchanged. They are war criminals and we must do everything to bring them to justice.’’

He ordered MPS to draft a law prohibitin­g the swap of Azovstal troops for Russian prisoners of war.

The office of Russia’s prosecutor-general asked the Supreme Court to recognise the Azov Battalion – one of the groups defending Azovstal – as a ‘‘terrorist organisati­on’’, in an apparent attempt to prevent its fighters from being treated as prisoners of war.

Leonid Slutsky, a Russian MP who is one of the negotiator­s in talks with Ukraine, called the combatants ‘‘animals in human form’’ and said they should receive the death penalty.

In Moscow, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov did not answer questions about whether the Azovstal troops would be treated as war criminals or prisoners of war. President Vladimir Putin ‘‘guaranteed that they would be treated according to the relevant internatio­nal laws’’, he said.

The Azov Battalion was formed in 2014 by a Ukrainian neo-nazi, but has since expanded and is no longer exclusivel­y an extreme-right unit. It has attracted soldiers from all background­s. Nonetheles­s, the battalion has served as a useful propaganda tool for the Kremlin.

Ukrainian marines and the 12th Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine were also among those fighting at Azovstal.

Russia’s defence ministry said 265 Ukrainian fighters from the Azovstal plant had surrendere­d, including 51 who were seriously wounded. Ukraine said some fighters remained trapped at the steelworks and efforts to rescue them were continuing. –

 ?? AP ?? Ukrainian servicemen sit in a bus after they were evacuated from the besieged Mariupol’s Azovstal steel plant, near a prison in Olenivka, in territory under the government of the Donetsk People’s Republic, in eastern Ukraine, on Tuesday.
AP Ukrainian servicemen sit in a bus after they were evacuated from the besieged Mariupol’s Azovstal steel plant, near a prison in Olenivka, in territory under the government of the Donetsk People’s Republic, in eastern Ukraine, on Tuesday.

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