Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Europe OKs plan to tally cost of Moscow’s war

- Molly Quell

REYKJAVIK, Iceland – More than 40 nations agreed Wednesday to set up a system to tally the damage Russia has inflicted on Ukraine in the hope of getting reparation­s, adding to the internatio­nal legal challenges the Kremlin is facing.

The register of damages, which will allow Ukrainian victims of war to catalog the harm they have suffered, found a plethora of support among the 46-nation Council of Europe summit in Iceland. Participan­ts also discussed the details of a potential future tribunal where Russia would face charges for waging war.

“This Reykjavik summit shows clearly that Putin has failed with his calculatio­ns – he wanted to divide Europe and has achieved the opposite,” said German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. “We stand closer together in Europe than ever before.”

While leaders were at the waterside venue on the far-flung island nation for two days, the United Nations’ top court announced it would hold hearings next month in a case between Russia and Ukraine. Kyiv claims Moscow is discrimina­ting against minority groups in occupied Crimea and is financing terrorism in the region.

But even if Ukraine prevails at The Hague-based Internatio­nal Court of Justice, a ruling wouldn’t make whole the millions of Ukrainians whose homes and lives have been torn apart by the conflict.

In theory, victims might have better luck at the Council of Europe’s own court, the European Court of Human Rights, where Moscow is facing thousands of complaints of human rights violations, including three brought by Ukraine. The Strasbourg-based court can order countries to pony up restitutio­n, but Russia’s neighbor Georgia has been yet unable to collect for damages inflicted by Moscow when it invaded in 2008.

However, Russia was expelled from the council last year, in the wake of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. And as long ago as 2015, it passed a law allowing it to overrule judgements from the ECHR.

Neither the court, nor the council, now has any channel of communicat­ion with the Russian authoritie­s.

The damages register is seen as a first step toward justice in Ukraine. “Accountabi­lity is one of the topics that is of crucial importance,” Marija Pejcinovic Buric, Secretary General of the Council of Europe, told the AP in an interview.

Compiling a comprehens­ive register of the destructio­n may be a first step: it’s unclear what else might follow. The Council of Europe has made it clear that it will not assess the credibilit­y of any claims, nor will it fund reparation­s payments. Those decisions will be left for other potential future institutio­ns to determine.

Little wonder that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, addressing the summit from Kyiv, reiterated his country’s wish for such a court specifically for the prosecutio­n of Russian aggression. In addition to military aid, another conference topic, he said his country needed “100% of justice, as there will be no reliable peace without justice.”

 ?? JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? “This Reykjavik summit shows clearly that Putin has failed with his calculatio­ns – he wanted to divide Europe and has achieved the opposite,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said during the summit in Reykjavik, Iceland.
JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES “This Reykjavik summit shows clearly that Putin has failed with his calculatio­ns – he wanted to divide Europe and has achieved the opposite,” German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said during the summit in Reykjavik, Iceland.

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