The Island Packet

UN says Russia executed POWs, tortures captives

- BY PAUL GODFREY UPI.com

Ukrainian prisoners of war are being executed by their Russian captors in ever higher numbers amid ongoing human rights and abuses and inhumane treatment, United Nations monitors said.

A record 32 Ukrainian POWs were executed in 12 separate incidents in the three months through February amid widespread torture and ill-treatment, deaths in custody, incommunic­ado detention, enforced disappeara­nces, and dire conditions of detention, the U.N. Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said in a news release on its latest findings published Tuesday.

The U.N. Office of the Human Rights High Commission­er’s 28-page “Report on the Human Rights Situation in Ukraine” from December through February is based on the testimony of 60 recently released Ukrainian POWs.

“Almost every single one of the Ukrainian POWs we interviewe­d described how Russian serviceper­sons or officials tortured them during their captivity, using repeated beatings, electric shocks, threats of execution, prolonged stress positions and mock execution. Over half of them were subjected to sexual violence,” said HRMMU head Danielle Bell.

“Most POWs also recounted the anguish of not being allowed to communicat­e with their families, and being deprived of adequate food and medical attention.”

The monitors recorded credible accounts of the execution of at least 32 Ukrainian POWs during the three months Dec.1 to Feb. 29 – sharply higher than in any previous monitoring period – three of which they said they had verified independen­tly.

The report also details violence committed against Ukrainian civilians in areas occupied by Russia by the military and civil authoritie­s including killings and arbitrary detention, as well as and crackdowns on free speech.

Russian POWs held by Ukraine were also interviewe­d for the report. Accounts provided by the 44 POWs found that while torture was not used at recognized internment camps, several detailed how they had been tortured and ill-treated in transit facilities after they had been taken from the theater of combat.

The report also criticizes the Ukrainian government in Kyiv for contraveni­ng Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law by continuing to prosecute and convict people for actions they cannot lawfully avoid carrying out under laws imposed by the Russian occupation.

A specific case highlighte­d in the report pertained to the death in custody of a person initially arrested for “justifying the armed attack by the Russian Federation against Ukraine.”

He had complained that penal authoritie­s failed to adequately respond to his worsting health, allegation­s that were the subject of an investigat­ion by Ukrainian authoritie­s.

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