Baltimore Sun

Evidence of sexual violence found

Russia repeatedly denies accusation­s of rights violations

- By Carlotta Gall

KHERSON, Ukraine — On her eighth or ninth day in Russian detention, Olha, a 26-year-old Ukrainian, was tied to a table, naked to the waist. For 15 minutes, her interrogat­or leveled obscenitie­s at her, then threw a jacket over her and let seven other men into the room.

“It was to frighten,” she remembered. “I did not know what would come next.”

Sitting in Olha’s cramped kitchen weeks later in Kherson, in southern Ukraine, Anna Sosonska, an investigat­or with the prosecutor general’s office, listened to her recount the ordeal — an account of forced nudity that, prosecutor­s say, added to an accumulati­on of evidence that Russian forces had used sexual crimes as a weapon of war in the places they once ruled.

“We are finding this problem of sexual violence in every place that Russia occupied,” said Sosonska, 33.

After months of bureaucrat­ic and political delays, Ukrainian officials are gathering pace in documentin­g sexual crimes, which are prevalent and devastatin­g in times of war but often remain hidden under layers of shame, stigma and fear.

“We found all types of cases of war crimes: rape, forced nudity, sexual torture” inflicted on men, women and children, Sosonska said. A pattern to the crimes is emerging, she added. “Now we see there is a line of war crimes in the Russian army and among Russian commanders.”

Russian officials have repeatedly

denied accusation­s of human rights abuses, despite widespread evidence and accounts collected by Ukrainian and internatio­nal investigat­ors. A spokespers­on for Russia’s Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, recently dismissed a report by the U.N. Human Rights Commission as unsubstant­iated testimonie­s and no more than “rumors and gossip.”

After investigat­ing some areas Russia retreated from, an independen­t internatio­nal commission reported to the United Nations in October that “an array of war crimes committed in Ukraine” included cases of sexual violence against women and girls.

Victims ranged from older than 80 to as young as a 4-year-old girl forced to perform oral sex on a soldier, which is rape, the report said.

Iryna Didenko, who leads the prosecutor’s department

investigat­ing such crimes, has already opened 154 cases of conflict-related sexual violence. The real number, she said, is “much, much more.”

In one formerly occupied village in the Kyiv region, psychologi­sts found 1 in 9 women had experience­d sexual violence, Didenko said. Hundreds of people suffered sexual violence and torture in Russian detention, she added.

The trauma is raw and inhibiting. Viktoriya, a 42-year-old woman in the Kyiv region, shakes when she describes how, in early March, Russian soldiers shot dead her neighbor and then hauled her and her neighbor’s wife off to be raped.

“The fear still remains,” she said. “Sometimes when the electricit­y is out, I am seized by fear and I feel they could come back.”

Viktoriya was one of the few survivors willing to talk

publicly. She asked that only her first name be used and that her face not be photograph­ed, as did several other women, for fear of reprisals by Russian forces.

But the stigma and judgment of neighbors and acquaintan­ces are also an abiding pain, she said.

“They are gossiping about me, and I mostly stay at home,” she said.

The grief was such that her neighbor Nataliia, who was also raped and whose husband was killed, was given refuge abroad. Her 15-year-old son was suicidal in the weeks after the attack, Didenko said.

A psychologi­st and lawyer, Didenko met Nataliia when she visited their village after Russian troops withdrew. Before the war, her department had handled domestic violence crimes, and she knew well the difficulti­es women faced in reporting crimes, she said.

Much of that has to do

with the stigma of rape in a conservati­ve religious society, but there is also a deep-seated distrust of the authoritie­s in a post-Soviet system that has rarely focused on victims’ needs and often blamed them instead.

“From our experience with domestic violence, we realized victims do not talk about it in principle,” Didenko said. It is even harder in a war when they could be accused of fraternizi­ng with the enemy, she said.

The need to help Ukraine’s survivors of sexual violence is immense, activists say. The nation’s few women’s shelters have started taking in war victims. Aid organizati­ons such as Women for Women Internatio­nal and the Andreev Foundation started providing mobile gynecologi­cal clinics and counseling sessions.

Of more than 800 woman and girls that the foundation has counseled since the invasion began, 22 have acknowledg­ed experienci­ng sexual violence in the war. Eight were younger than 18.

From the accounts of those who have come forward, there is evidence that Russian commanders knew about rape or even encouraged it, officials said. Wayne Jordash, a British lawyer advising Ukrainian prosecutor­s, said he had seen signs of acquiescen­ce by commanders among 30 cases he had reviewed.

Didenko said there was a clear pattern of behavior when Russian troops seized an area: “Ground forces arrive, and rapes start on the second or third day.”

Witnesses reported commanders’ ordering rape or giving instructio­ns that suggested they condoned it, like telling soldiers to find some relaxation.

In one case Didenko described, a commander told his men, “OK, go,” as he waited outside a house. One soldier was heard saying, “We’ll just beat her,” about one woman, and “This one we’ll rape.”

In another case, eight Russian soldiers raped and assaulted a man who was stopped at a checkpoint.

The similarity of the evidence and accounts across cities, describing torture methods, interrogat­ions and officers from Russia’s main intelligen­ce agency, the FSB, has convinced Ukrainian prosecutor­s that abuses can be traced to the Russian leadership.

“It cannot be that a soldier did this without an order,” Didenko said.

Many Ukrainians and their supporters say they believe Russia aims to crush Ukraine’s spirit of resistance and destroy its society.

“It’s part of a genocide,” Didenko said, “but for us to prove it, we need time.”

 ?? LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 ?? Olha, a 26-year-old woman, faced sexual violence by Russian soldiers when she was detained in Kherson, Ukraine. Russian officials have denied abuses against civilians despite widespread evidence.
LAURA BOUSHNAK/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2022 Olha, a 26-year-old woman, faced sexual violence by Russian soldiers when she was detained in Kherson, Ukraine. Russian officials have denied abuses against civilians despite widespread evidence.

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