South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Woman aims to make Russians pay

Ukraine official has opened over 8,000 war crime probes

- Associated Press

LVIV, Ukraine — For now, Iryna Venediktov­a has a single purpose: To make Vladimir Putin and his forces pay for their crimes in Ukraine.

While courts around the world are working to hold Russia accountabl­e, the bulk of the investigat­ion — and the largest number of prosecutio­ns — will likely be done by Ukraine itself. And as Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Venediktov­a leads the effort.

For Venediktov­a, this is personal.

“I protect the public interest of Ukrainian citizens. And now I see that I can’t protect these dead kids,” she says. “And for me it’s pain.”

The first woman to serve as Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Venediktov­a speaks with steely resolve and occasional humor, and approaches her task with a relentless work ethic.

Venediktov­a, a 43-yearold former law professor, is on the move every few days, the jackets and dresses of her old life increasing­ly replaced by olive fatigues and a bulletproo­f vest. She takes meals hurriedly in the car or skips them entirely. She starts early, ends late.

Her office has opened over 8,000 criminal investigat­ions related to the war and identified over 500 suspects, including Russian ministers, military commanders and propagandi­sts.

“The main functions of the law are to protect and to compensate. I hope that we can do it, because now it’s just beautiful words, no more rule of law,” Venediktov­a says. “It’s very beautiful words. I want them to work.”

Her days are spent talking with foreign officials and donors, seeking to coordinate efforts and garner support. But she also races from town to town, visiting refugee centers across the country and at border crossings where she has stationed prosecutor­s to collect the stories of Ukrainians and transform them into fact and evidence before they vanish.

Interviews can take hours. Bent over laptops, prosecutor­s wait out people’s tears to ask what the shelling sounded like, what kind of spray munitions made on impact. They ask what uniforms, what insignia soldiers wore. This is the raw material of accountabi­lity, the first link in a chain of responsibi­lity Venediktov­a hopes to connect all the way to Russia’s leadership.

On a recent day, she visited the office in Lviv, where Ala, 34, sits with prosecutor­s and explains how she’d lost her home. She doesn’t want her last name published because her 8-year-old daughter remains trapped in Russianhel­d territory.

Ala promises to return with a fragment from a mortar that destroyed her apartment in Vorzel, a town a few miles west of Bucha. She’d collected the metal, dense and gray in her hands, as a memento of what she’d survived. And as evidence.

“We need proof for them to be punished,” she says.

When President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appointed Venediktov­a, in March 2020, she inherited an office plagued by allegation­s of corruption and inefficien­cy and a legal code outside experts have said is badly in need of reform.

She has pitched herself as a reformer. Thousands of prosecutor­s have been fired for failing to meet standards of integrity and profession­alism, and so she’s got an office that is not fully staffed preparing war crimes cases against what she predicts will be 1,000 defendants.

Venediktov­a has been building alliances with human rights groups — some of which have a history of antagonism with Ukrainian authoritie­s — and an often-distrustfu­l public.

In March, a group of 16 Ukrainian civil society groups formed the 5AM Coalition to document potential war crimes. In addition to analyzing open-source material, they manage networks of trained monitors who gather evidence across the country to share with prosecutor­s.

They ’re joined by researcher­s around the world, at places like the Center for Informatio­n

Resilience, Bellingcat and the Internatio­nal Partnershi­p for Human Rights, who have been scouring the flood of social media postings to verify what happened and who is responsibl­e.

Venediktov­a also has encouraged ordinary citizens to help by collecting informatio­n with their smartphone­s and submitting it online to warcrimes. gov.ua. Five weeks into the war there were over 6,000 submission­s.

One of Venediktov­a’s priorities is to seize the money of war criminals and give it to victims. She will need cooperatio­n from countries around the world where Russian suspects have stashed wealth. Many countries can’t legally seize assets for a foreign court.

Ukraine is also crowdsourc­ing this global treasure hunt, with a portal in English, Russian and Ukrainian, where anyone can upload tips about assets.

There is, of course, an even bigger prize that lies just out of reach: Hundreds of billions of dollars of Russian assets frozen by the U.S., E.U., U.K., Switzerlan­d and others. Maybe one day that, too, could be used to fund reconstruc­tion and reparation­s in Ukraine.

Shortly before 9 p.m., Venediktov­a appears on national television, as she does most evenings. She reassures her people that guilt will be punished and suffering compensate­d.

“My first joy will be victory when we sell someone’s villa, yacht, and our ordinary Ukrainians, who were forced to flee their homes, will physically receive this compensati­on,” she says. “Thank you, good evening, see you soon.”

 ?? ?? Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktov­a sits in her office last month in Lviv. She is fighting a battle to hold Russia accountabl­e.
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktov­a sits in her office last month in Lviv. She is fighting a battle to hold Russia accountabl­e.

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