Brussels Russia stood accused yesterday of terrible” war crimes, with western leaders condemning the killing of scores of unarmed civilians near Kyiv in alleged atrocities that fuelled demands for tougher action against Moscow.
Ukraine's president said the Kremlin-ordered attack on his country amounted to genocide after local officials reported mass graves in the town of Bucha and killings of civilians in nearby Irpin and Hostomel. Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine's refusal to yield meant “we are being destroyed and exterminated”. His foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said Bucha was a deliberate massacre and Russia was worse than Isis.
Witnesses of alleged atrocities in Bucha, 35 miles northwest of Kyiv, told the Guardian that Russian forces had killed civilians at will.
Taras Schevchenko, 43, said Russian soldiers, who have now withdrawn from the area, had refused to let men leave through a humanitarian corridor, instead shooting at him and others as they fled across an open field. Bodies, he said, were scattered on the pavements, with some of those killed having been “squashed by tanks ... like animal skin rugs”.
Shevchenko's mother, Yevdokia, 77, said she had witnessed an elderly man who challenged a Russian soldier being shot dead as his wife was standing next to him. They shot him dead, and ordered the woman to leave,” she said. The accounts could not be independently verified.
Ukraine's military released footage yesterday of what appeared to be a torture chamber in a basement, with a barracks in an adjoining room. A line of bodies were found, hands tied and crouched facing a wall. The military said at least one victim's kneecaps had been shot before he received a bullet to the head. Bucha's mayor, Anatoly Fedoruk said 280 bodies had also been found in mass graves.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 04, 2022-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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