Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

8 executed in Bucha assault commended

- By Elena Becatoros

BUCHA, Ukraine — Clutching flowers and wiping away tears, relatives, neighbors and friends of eight men executed by Russian forces during the occupation of the Ukrainian town of Bucha gathered Saturday to mark the first anniversar­y of the deaths.

The eight had set up a roadblock in an attempt to prevent Russian troops from advancing as they swept toward Kyiv, Ukrane’s capital, at the start of their invasion. But the men were captured, Ukrainian authoritie­s say, and executed.

Their bodies lay outside a building on Yablunska Street for a month, with relatives only able to collect them in April after Russian troops pulled out of Bucha.

After the Russians left, Ukrainian authoritie­s found mass graves and bodies strewn in the town’s streets, buildings and homes. The events there are being investigat­ed as war crimes.

“My heart is torn apart and my soul is in such pain for everyone who died here,” said Oleksandr Turovskyi, whose 35-year-old son, Sviatoslav, was among the eight.

Photos of the men now hang on the wall of the building where they were found, between two blue and yellow Ukrainian flags. A wreath of red plastic roses and bouquets lean against the wall beneath the pictures.

As relatives gathered for the anniversar­y commemorat­ion, Halyna Stakhova, 67, tenderly touched the photo of Sviatoslav Turovskyi, her sonin-law.

She lived in a basement in Bucha during the occupation, she said, and relatives told her Svietoslav had been executed. At first, Stakhova refused to believe them, but she eventually had to accept that her daughter’s husband was dead.

“We were trying to get the body back,” she said. “But the Russians said: ‘Do you want to end up lying beside him? Ok, let’s go.’ So we waited for one month to collect the body.”

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