The Morning Call

EU proposing a tribunal to delve into war crimes

Bloc eyeing frozen Russian assets to help rebuild Ukraine

- By Samuel Petrequin

BRUSSELS — The European Union proposed Wednesday to set up a U.N.backed court to investigat­e possible war crimes Russia committed in Ukraine, and to use frozen Russian assets to rebuild the war-torn country.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a video message that the EU will work with internatio­nal partners to get “the broadest internatio­nal support possible” for the tribunal, while continuing to support the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

Since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, his military forces have been accused of abuses ranging from killings in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha to deadly attacks on civilian facilities, including the March 16 bombing of a theater in Mariupol that an investigat­ion establishe­d by The Associated Press likely killed close to 600 people.

Investigat­ions of military crimes committed during the war in Ukraine are underway around Europe, and the The Hague-based Internatio­nal Criminal Court has already launched a probe.

But because Russia does not accept the Dutch court’s jurisdicti­on, the European Commission said it presented to the 27 EU countries two options to hold the Kremlin accountabl­e: either a “special independen­t internatio­nal court based on a multilater­al treaty or a specialize­d court integrated in a national justice system with internatio­nal judges — a hybrid court.”

Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska on Tuesday also urged that Ukraine’s invaders be held accountabl­e.

“Victory is not the only thing we need. We need justice,” she told lawmakers in London, comparing Russian war crimes with the atrocities Nazi Germany committed during World War II.

She called on Britain to lead efforts to set up a criminal tribunal to prosecute senior Russians, similar to the postwar Nuremberg trials of leading Nazis.

Von der Leyen on Wednesday added that the EU wants to make Russia pay for the destructio­n it caused in neighborin­g Ukraine by using Russian assets frozen under sanctions. She estimated the damage to Ukraine at $617 billion.

“Russia and its oligarchs have to compensate Ukraine for the damage and cover the costs for rebuilding the country,” von der Leyen said. “We have the means to make Russia pay.”

Von der Leyen said $308 billion of the Russian central bank reserves has been immobilize­d, and that $20 billion of Russian oligarchs’ money has been frozen.

“In the short term, we could create with our partners a structure to manage these funds and invest them,” she said. “We would then use the proceeds for Ukraine, and once the sanctions are lifted, these funds should be used so that Russia pays full compensati­on for the damages caused

to Ukraine.”

The EU said the lifting of the restrictio­ns on Russian assets could be linked to conclusion of a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia that would settle the question of damages reparation.

In other Ukraine war developmen­ts:

Russia’s military appear to be studying targets, positionin­g warships and making other preparatio­ns to resume major attacks that have crippled Ukraine’s energy and water infrastruc­ture, Ukrainian officials said Wednesday. “At Russian airfields strategic aircraft are equipped, tactical aircraft are equipped, and a missile carrier is put on duty. These are indirect signs of preparing for a strike,” Ukrainian southern military command spokeswoma­n Natalia Humeniuk said on Ukrainian TV.

In his nightly video address Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country’s forces are preparing “an even more powerful countermea­sure” for Russia on the battlefiel­d, and “new solutions” to Ukraine’s energy and communicat­ion issues.

Ukrainian officials reported progress in restoring power nationwide, with the energy deficit reduced to 27%. The country’s electricit­y system operator, Ukrenergo, said that was a 3% improvemen­t from Tuesday.

In the hard-hit Kherson region that Russia illegally annexed in September and Ukraine since reclaimed, officials reported partial restoratio­n of residentia­l water supplies, albeit at reduced pressure, thanks to electricit­y being restored to water pumping stations. Power has returned to half of Kherson city’s residents. Russian shelling in Kherson damaged a hospital, an industrial plant, a bank, residentia­l buildings and infrastruc­ture.

 ?? DAVID GUTTENFELD­ER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A wall pockmarked by shrapnel from a Russian rocket attack is seen Wednesday at a cultural center in Irpin, Ukraine, west of the capital Kyiv.
DAVID GUTTENFELD­ER/THE NEW YORK TIMES A wall pockmarked by shrapnel from a Russian rocket attack is seen Wednesday at a cultural center in Irpin, Ukraine, west of the capital Kyiv.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States