Baltimore Sun

Sides trade blame in prison attack

Dozens of Ukrainian POWs reported to be dead, hurt in assault

- By Susie Blann

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia and Ukraine accused each other Friday of shelling a prison in a separatist region of eastern Ukraine, an attack that reportedly killed dozens of Ukrainian prisoners of war captured after the fall of Mariupol, the city where troops famously held out against a monthslong Russian siege.

Both sides said the assault was premeditat­ed with the aim of covering up atrocities.

Russia claimed that Ukraine’s military used U.S.supplied rocket launchers to strike the prison in Olenivka, a settlement controlled by the Moscow-backed Donetsk People’s Republic. Separatist authoritie­s and Russian officials said the attack killed 53 Ukrainian POWs and wounded another 75.

Moscow opened a probe into the attack, sending a team to the site from Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee, the country’s main criminal investigat­ion agency. The state RIA Novosti agency reported that fragments of U.S.-supplied precision High Mobility Artillery Rocket System rockets were found at the site.

The Ukrainian military denied making any rocket or artillery strikes in Olenivka, and it accused the Russians of shelling the prison to cover up the alleged torture and execution of Ukrainians there.

An adviser to Ukrainian

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the shelling as “a deliberate, cynical, calculated mass murder of Ukrainian prisoners.”

Neither claim could be independen­tly verified.

Video shot by The Associated Press showed charred, twisted bed frames in the wrecked barracks, as well as burned bodies and metal sheets hanging from the destroyed roof. The footage also included bodies lined up on the ground next to a barbed-wire fence and an array of what was claimed to be metal rocket fragments on a wooden bench.

Denis Pushilin, leader of

the internatio­nally unrecogniz­ed Donetsk republic, said the prison held 193 inmates. He did not specify how many were Ukrainian POWs.

The deputy commander of the Donetsk separatist forces, Eduard Basurin, suggested that Ukraine decided to strike the prison to prevent captives from revealing key military informatio­n.

Ukraine “knew exactly where they were being held and in what place,” he said. “After the Ukrainian prisoners of war began to talk about the crimes they committed, and orders they

received from Kyiv, a decision was made by the political leadership of Ukraine: carry out a strike here.”

Ukrainian presidenti­al adviser Mykhailo Podolyak called for a “strict investigat­ion” into the attack and urged the United Nations and other internatio­nal organizati­ons to condemn it. He said the Russians had transferre­d some Ukrainian prisoners to the barracks just a few days before the strike, suggesting that it was planned.

“The purpose — to discredit Ukraine in front of our partners and disrupt weapons supply,” he

tweeted.

Ukrainian officials alleged that Russia’s Wagner Group, mercenarie­s Russia has used in other armed conflicts and reportedly elsewhere in Ukraine, carried out the assault.

Ukraine’s security agencies issued a statement citing evidence that Russia was responsibl­e, including the transfer of prisoners, analysis of injuries and the blast wave, intercepte­d phone conversati­ons and the absence of shelling at the site.

“All this leaves no doubt: The explosion in Olenivka was a Russian terrorist act and a gross violation of internatio­nal agreements,” the statement said.

A Russian Defense Ministry spokespers­on, Lt. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v, described the strike as a “bloody provocatio­n” aimed at discouragi­ng Ukrainian soldiers from surrenderi­ng. He, too, claimed that U.S.-supplied HIMARS rockets were used, and said eight guards were among the wounded.

Ukrainian forces are fighting to hold on to the remaining territory under their control in Donetsk. Together with the neighborin­g Luhansk province, they make up Ukraine’s mostly Russian-speaking industrial Donbas region.

For several months, Moscow has focused on trying to seize parts of the Donbas not already held by the separatist­s.

Holding POWs in an area with active fighting appeared to defy the Geneva Convention, which requires that prisoners be evacuated as soon as possible after capture to camps away from combat zones.

More than 2,400 soldiers from the Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian national guard and other military units gave up their fight in Mariupol and surrendere­d under orders from Ukraine’s military in May.

Scores of Ukrainian soldiers have been taken to prisons in Russiancon­trolled areas. Some have returned to Ukraine as part of prisoner exchanges with Russia, but the families of other POWs have no idea whether their loved ones are still alive, or if they will ever come home.

 ?? EVGENIY MALOLETKA/AP ?? Fire engulfs a wheat field after Russian shelling Friday in the Kharkiv region of northeaste­rn Ukraine.
EVGENIY MALOLETKA/AP Fire engulfs a wheat field after Russian shelling Friday in the Kharkiv region of northeaste­rn Ukraine.

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