Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pattern of war crimes alleged

Amnesty group says it has evidence against Russian forces

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KYIV, Ukraine — Amnesty Internatio­nal says it has documented extensive war crimes by Russian forces in communitie­s around the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, including arbitrary executions, bombardmen­ts of residences and torture.

“The pattern of crimes committed by Russian forces that we have documented includes both unlawful attacks and willful killings of civilians,” Agnes Callamard, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Secretary General, said Friday in a statement. “It is vital that all those responsibl­e, including up the chain of command, are brought to justice.”

The organizati­on said it collected evidence and testimony in eight cities near Kyiv, including Bucha.

After Russian forces retreated from Bucha in April, corpses were found lying on streets, many with their hands bound behind their backs, and in mass graves. Oleksandr Pavlyuk, the Kyiv regional governor, said at least 1,235 civilian bodies have been found in the region.

Russia has consistent­ly claimed that it hits only targets with military values. It has denied war-crimes allegation­s and claimed that the Bucha corpses were falsified as a “provocatio­n.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal’s report described the shooting in Bucha of Yevhen Petrashenk­o, a 43-year-old sales manager, who was shot in his kitchen while his wife and children were hiding in the basement. The Russian military allowed his wife, Tatiana, to enter the apartment, where she found her husband’s corpse.

“Yevhen was lying dead in the kitchen. He had been shot in the back, [near his] lungs and liver. His body remained in the apartment until 10 March, when we were able to bury him in a shallow grave in the courtyard,” the report quoted her as saying.

Their neighbor Leonid Bodnarchuk, a 44-year-old constructi­on worker, was shot dead by Russian soldiers as he climbed the stairs, and then, the military threw a grenade into the stairwell, the report said.

The executions in Bucha were carried out with specialize­d rifles used by some elite Russian units, the report said. Amnesty Internatio­nal staff found 7N12 armor-piercing rounds with a 9x39mm black tip at the murder scene, which are used by elite units of the Russian army.

The investigat­ion also described bombardmen­t of the city of Borodyanka, in which at least 40 people were killed in indiscrimi­nate bombings that destroyed eight residentia­l buildings.

It quoted Borodyanka resident Vasyl Yaroshenko as saying he had left his multistory residence for his garage when a bomb hit the house.

“I saw a large gap in the building,” he said, according to the report. “My wife Halina was among those killed. I still see her by the door of our apartment, the home where we lived for 40 years.”

The report says researcher­s found evidence documentin­g specific units of the Russian army that were involved, including training books that belonged to the driver of the 104th Regiment of the Airborne Forces.

“We have met families whose loved ones were killed in horrific attacks, and whose lives have changed forever because of the Russian invasion,” Callamard said. “We support their demands for justice, and call on the Ukrainian authoritie­s, the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and others to ensure evidence is preserved that could support future war crime prosecutio­ns.”

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