Times Herald-Record

Russia: ‘Neo-Nazis’ attended the wake for Ukrainian soldier

- Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS – Russia’s U.N. ambassador claimed Monday that alleged “neo-Nazis” and men of military age were at the wake for a Ukrainian soldier in a village café that was hit by a missile strike last week, killing 52 people.

Vassily Nebenzia told a U.N. Security Council meeting called by Ukraine that the soldier was “a high-ranking Ukrainian nationalis­t,” with “a lot of neo-Nazi accomplice­s attending.”

In Thursday’s strike by a Russian Iskander ballistic missile, the village of Hroza in the northeaste­rn Kharkiv region, lost over 15% of its 300 population. The café, which had reopened for the wake, was obliterate­d, and whole families perished.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied last Friday that Russia was responsibl­e for the Hroza attack. He insisted, as Moscow has in the past, that the Russian military doesn’t target civilians and civilian facilities.

Nebenzia reiterated that the Russian military doesn’t target civilians and civilian facilities.

“We remind that if the Kyiv regime concentrat­es soldiers in a given place they become a legitimate target for strikes including from the point of view of IHL,” the initials for internatio­nal humanitari­an law, he told the Security Council.

He also said that putting heavy weapons and missile defenses in residentia­l areas “is a serious violation and leads to the type of tragedy that we’ve talked about today.”

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly painted his enemies in Ukraine as “neo-Nazis,” even though the country has a Jewish president who lost relatives in the Holocaust and who heads a Western-backed, democratic­ally elected government. The Holocaust, World War II and Nazism have been important tools for Putin in his bid to legitimize Russia’s war in Ukraine, but historians see their use as disinforma­tion and a cynical ploy to further the Russian leader’s aims.

The wake in Hroza was for Andriy Kozyr, a soldier from Hroza who died last winter fighting Russia’s invading forces in eastern Ukraine. According to Ukrainian news reports, he was initially laid to rest elsewhere in Ukraine, as his native village remained under Russian occupation.

Kozyr’s family decided to rebury him in Hroza more than 15 months after his death, following DNA tests that confirmed his identity. Among those who died in the missile strike were his son, Dmytro Kozyr, also a soldier, and his wife Nina, who was just days short of her 21st birthday.

Nebenzia claimed that Ukraine’s government wrings its hands about civilians who died in airstrikes on hotels, hostels, cafés and shops, “and then a large number of obituaries of foreign mercenarie­s and soldiers appear.”

“What a coincidenc­e,” Nebenzia said. “We do not exclude that this will be the same with Hroza.”

U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood asked everyone in the council chamber to take a moment and let the appalling fact sink in: “People gathered to grieve their loved ones must now be grieved themselves.”

“This is one of the deadliest strikes by Russia against Ukraine since the beginning of its full-scale invasion last year,” he said, stressing U.S. support for investigat­ors from the U.N. and local authoritie­s who have gone to Hroza to gather possible evidence of war crimes.

China’s deputy U.N. ambassador Geng Shuang said Beijing finds the heavy civilian casualties in the attack on the village “concerning.”

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