Los Angeles Times

More bodies are unearthed around Kyiv

Ukrainian authoritie­s continue exhumation­s stemming from brutal Russian occupation.

-

BORODYANKA, Ukraine — The freshly exhumed remains of three men lie in black body bags on the edge of the cemetery in a town not far from Ukraine’s capital, waiting to be taken to a morgue. The men have not been identified.

Ukrainian authoritie­s are unearthing people who were hastily buried in makeshift graves during Russia’s brief but brutal occupation last year of villages and towns near Kyiv. Almost 200 bodies remain unidentifi­ed, while 280 people are listed as missing.

Oleksander Pinchuk’s mother, Halyna, is among them. They never found her body in the wreckage of her apartment building, which took a direct hit from an airstrike a year ago. Pinchuk had walked out of the building eight hours earlier and has not seen his mother since, he said.

On Thursday, Pinchuk stood in the winter chill among a small gathering for a religious service to commemorat­e the anniversar­y of the strike in the town of Borodyanka.

“Just look at what the Russians brought to us and what they did to our beautiful town,” said Dmytro Koshka, the priest conducting the service at the site of the destroyed residentia­l building. “How could we ever forget and forgive?”

Nothing remains of the structure except the outline. Behind it is another apartment building, blackened and empty but still standing.

Pinchuk said rescue crews only managed to get to the building last April, after Ukrainian forces retook control of Borodyanka. The crews dug through the rubble for about two weeks and located the remains of 15 people. But they found no trace of dozens more believed to have been inside the 108-unit building.

“We still have hope for at least some of them, but the rest, they just burned alive,” Pinchuk said, his gaze fixed, the pain of loss visible in his eyes.

Without a body to bury, the 43-year-old hopes against hope that his mother is alive. He heard rumors that Russian troops took more than 100 people from Borodyanka to Belarus; perhaps she was among them. “Until the last moment, I will think of her as alive,” he said.

The exhumation of the three bodies Thursday from two makeshift graves on the edge of Borodyanka’s cemetery meant that some families may have a chance to learn what became of their loved ones.

A passerby found the three bodies in early March 2022, when Russian forces still occupied the town, and buried them with the help of another man, according to Andrii Nebytov, head of the Kyiv region’s police department.

The passerby then fled the region. He recently returned and told authoritie­s about the burials, the police chief said.

One of the dead is believed to be a 50-year-old local man who was shot and partially burned in his car, but DNA tests are needed to confirm that. Nobody knows who the other two are.

There’s not much to go on to identify them. A green pencil is all that was found on one man; on another, packs of cigarettes and key fobs. The remains are so decomposed that identifica­tion and determinat­ion of cause of death will require forensic testing.

The exhumation­s bring the number of civilian bodies found in previously Russianocc­upied areas of the Kyiv region to 1,373, Nebytov said. Of those, 197 have yet to be identified.

 ?? Vadim Ghirda Associated Press ?? THE FRESHLY EXHUMED bodies of three men are transporte­d to a morgue from a cemetery in the town of Borodyanka, Ukraine, near the capital, Kyiv. A passerby buried the bodies, still unidentifi­ed, in March 2022.
Vadim Ghirda Associated Press THE FRESHLY EXHUMED bodies of three men are transporte­d to a morgue from a cemetery in the town of Borodyanka, Ukraine, near the capital, Kyiv. A passerby buried the bodies, still unidentifi­ed, in March 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States