New York Post

'SCENE OF CRIME'

Vlad tours Ukr. city he ruined

- By JESSE O’NEILL With Wires

A day after he was charged with war crimes by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s defiant midnight propaganda tour of Mariupol, Ukraine, drew scathing criticism from Kyiv leaders, who noted “a criminal always returns to the crime scene.”

Russian state media cherrypick­ed positive reactions to the 70-year-old dictator’s visit to the decimated port city, showing Putin palling around with rehoused residents in his first trip to the frontlines of his country’s 13month unprovoked invasion.

Critics accused Putin of visiting Mariupol under the cover of darkness to avoid confrontin­g the full scope of the obliterati­on in the fully occupied eastern city, where about 90% of its buildings were destroyed in the first months of the war. Ukraine estimates 20,000 residents were killed and 70% of the city’s population was forced to flee amid Russia’s violent land grab.

“The criminal always returns to the crime scene,” Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky’s aide Mykhailo Podolyak wrote on Twitter.

His sentiments were echoed by Mariupol’s exiled Mayor Vadym Boychenko.

“He has come in person to see what he has done,” Boychenko told the BBC. “He’s come to see what he will be punished for.”

On the ground, a far rosier picture was painted by Kremlin propaganda, as Putin was seen driving around the city while being briefed on rebuilding efforts by Russian officials.

“Do you live here? Do you like it?” Putin was filmed asking people.

‘Piece of heaven’

“Very much. It’s a little piece of heaven that we have here now,” a woman replied, as she clasped her hands and thanked Putin for “the victory.”

“We need to start getting to know each other better,” Putin told a group of stunned residents, according to CNN.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin accompanie­d Putin on his tour of the bombed out former European industrial center.

“The downtown has been badly damaged,” Khusnullin said. “We want to finish [reconstruc­tion] of the center by the end of the year, at least the façade part. The center is very beautiful.”

The two also spoke of plans to build a new hospital to replace the children’s and maternity hospital bombed while patients and workers were inside.

“There will be an ambulance, and all the most modern laboratori­es will be there,” Khusnullin said, according to the report.

Putin responds, “Everything will be fine.”

Putin’s visit came as his staff said the arrest warrant issued by the ICC for allegedly abducting and deporting children and other Ukrainians to Russia was “null and void” and “outrageous and unacceptab­le.”

The May bombing of a Mariupol theater that housed sheltering families, killing hundreds, was also to a war crime, humanright­s groups have said.

Putin is subject to arrest if he stepped foot in any of the 123 countries that have signed off on the statute of The Hague court.

 ?? ?? TOURIST TRAP: Vladimir Putin (near left) on Sunday listens to Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin during his visit to Mariupol, Ukraine, which was devastated (above) when Russian captured it last year.
TOURIST TRAP: Vladimir Putin (near left) on Sunday listens to Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin during his visit to Mariupol, Ukraine, which was devastated (above) when Russian captured it last year.

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