Russia faces growing outrage amid new evidence of atrocities in Ukraine

4 April 2022, 16:34

Women mourn during the funeral of 44-year-old soldier Tereshko Volodymyr, and 41-year-old soldier Simakov Oleksandr, after he was killed in action, at the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul Church in Lviv, western Ukraine, on Monday April 4 2022
Russia Ukraine War. Picture: PA

Some western leaders called for further sanctions in response to the alleged atrocities, even as Moscow continued to press its offensive in the east.

Russia faced a fresh wave of condemnation on Monday after evidence emerged of what appeared to be deliberate killings of civilians in Ukraine.

Some western leaders called for further sanctions in response, even as Moscow continued to press its offensive in the country’s east.

European allies, though united in outrage, appeared split on how to respond.

Poland, which is on Ukraine’s border and has taken in large numbers of refugees, angrily singled out France and Germany for not taking more strident action and urged Europe to quickly wean itself off Russian energy, while Berlin said it would take a longer-term approach.

Ukrainian officials said the bodies of 410 civilians were found in towns around the capital, Kyiv, that were recaptured from Russian forces in recent days.

In Bucha, northwest of the capital, Associated Press (AP) journalists saw 21 bodies, including a group of nine in civilian clothes who appeared to have been shot at close range.

At least two had their hands tied behind their backs.

In Motyzhyn, to the west of Kyiv, AP journalists saw the bodies of four people who appeared to have been shot at close range and thrown into a pit.

Residents said the mayor, her son, and her husband — who had been bound and blindfolded — were among them.

US President Joe Biden called for a war crimes trial against Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and said he will seek more sanctions after the reported atrocities.

“You saw what happened in Bucha,” Mr Biden said, describing Mr Putin as a “war criminal”.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky made his first reported foray outside the capital since the war began, visiting Bucha on Monday to meet with residents.

There, he denounced the killings as “genocide” and “war crimes”.

POLITICS Ukraine
(PA Graphics)

Olena Kolesnik, who fled Kharkiv for Poland, echoed his assessment.

“This is genocide. This is fascism. This is the extermination of people – innocent people, children, women, and the elderly,” she said, while also describing her hometown in Ukraine’s north as being in a state of ruin after weeks of shelling.

The images of battered corpses lying in the streets or hastily dug graves unleashed a wave of outrage that could signal a turning point in the nearly six-week-old war.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said in a tweet on Monday she had spoken to Mr Zelensky. She said the European Union “is ready” to send investigators to Ukraine to help the local prosecutor general “document war crimes”.

Sanctions have thus far failed to halt the offensive, and rising energy prices along with tight controls on the Russian currency market have blunted their impact, with the rouble rebounding strongly after initially crashing.

Western and Ukrainian leaders have accused Russia of war crimes before, and the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor has opened a probe to investigate the conflict.

But the latest reports ratcheted up the condemnation even further, with Mr Zelensky and others going so far as to accuse Russia of genocide.

The crime of genocide is difficult to prove because prosecutors would have to show that the killers or their commanders had a “specific intent” to partially or wholly destroy a group of people — but the use of the word has clear emotional resonance and could serve to draw even more attention to the conflict.

People board a tram, as smoke rises in the air following a Russian attack a day before, in Odesa, Ukraine, on Monday April 4 2022
People board a tram, as smoke rises in the air following a Russian attack a day before, in Odesa, Ukraine, on Monday April 4 2022 (Petros Giannakouris/AP)

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov rejected the allegations, describing the scenes outside Kyiv as a “stage-managed anti-Russian provocation.”

He said the mayor of Bucha made no mention of atrocities a day after Russian troops left last week, but two days later scores of bodies were photographed scattered in the streets.

He said Russia is pushing for an urgent meeting of the United Nations Security Council to discuss the matter, but the UK, which currently chairs the body, has refused to convene it.

The US and Britain have accused Russia in recent weeks of using Security Council meetings to spread disinformation.

European leaders, meanwhile, left no doubt about who they thought was behind the killings.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said “the Russian authorities are responsible for these atrocities, committed while they had effective control of the area”.

“The perpetrators of war crimes and other serious violations as well as the responsible government officials and military leaders will be held accountable,” he added.

POLITICS Ukraine
(PA Graphics)

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday there is “clear evidence of war crimes” in Bucha that demand new measures.

“I’m in favour of a new round of sanctions and in particular on coal and gasoline. We need to act,” he said on France-Inter radio.

But Poland’s Prime Minister, who described Russia under Mr Putin as a “totalitarian-fascist state”, lashed out at German and French leaders by name for not doing more, while calling for actions “that will finally break Putin’s war machine”.

“President Macron, how many times have you negotiated with Putin? What have you achieved? … Would you negotiate with Hitler, with Stalin, with Pol Pot?” Mateusz Morawiecki asked.

“Chancellor Scholz, Olaf, it is not the voices of German businesses that should be heard aloud in Berlin today. It is the voice of these innocent women and children.”

He said “the bloody massacres perpetrated by Russian soldiers deserve to be called by name: this is genocide.”

Spain’s Prime Minister also used the word “genocide”.

A man lifts a door covering the opening of an underground concrete enclosure in which bodies of civilians killed by Russian forces, according to residents, are dumped as people were unable to transport them to a cemetery in Bucha, Ukraine
A man lifts a door covering the opening of an underground concrete enclosure in which bodies of civilians killed by Russian forces, according to residents, are dumped as people were unable to transport them to a cemetery in Bucha, Ukraine (Vadim Ghirda/AP)

But election victories by incumbent right-wing parties that are friendly to Russia in both Hungary and Serbia over the weekend pointed to other potential cracks in western opposition to the invasion.

The US and its allies have sought to punish Russia for the invasion by imposing sweeping economic sanctions.

But they may be reluctant to impose measures that cause further harm to a global economy still recovering from the coronavirus pandemic.

As a major oil and gas exporter, Russia stands to benefit from any rise in already high global energy prices.

Europe is in a particular bind, since it gets 40% of its gas and 25% of its oil from Russia.

Governments have been scrambling to find ways to reduce that reliance without causing a substantial loss of economic output.

Over the weekend, Lithuania announced it cut itself off entirely from gas imports from Russia.

Zoya, the wife of 44 year old, Hennadiy Merchynskyi cries after identifying along with police the body of her husband, killed by Russian forces and dumped in a well in the village of Motyzhyn, Ukraine
Zoya, the wife of 44-year-old Hennadiy Merchynskyi, cries after identifying the body of her husband, who was killed by Russian forces and dumped in a well in the village of Motyzhyn, Ukraine (Vadim Ghirda/AP)

German vice chancellor Robert Habeck, who is also the economy minister and responsible for energy, said Europe can go “significantly further” in imposing sanctions against Russia.

But he said Germany is right to take a longer-term approach to abandoning Russian energy imports.

Germany has faced criticism for opposing an immediate halt to Russian energy deliveries.

The country says it hopes to end Russian coal imports this summer and oil imports by the end of the year, but halting gas will take longer since it relies more heavily on it.

“We are working every day on creating the conditions for and steps toward an embargo,” Mr Habeck said. “We are on the right track.”

Wolfgang Buechner, a German government spokesman, meanwhile, said Mr Putin and his supporters “will feel the consequences” of additional measures to be approved in the coming days, though he provided no details.

Mr Putin’s February 24 invasion has left thousands of people dead and forced more than four million Ukrainians to flee their country.

A woman waits for distribution of food products in the village of Motyzhyn, Ukraine, which was until recently under the control of the Russian military
A woman waits for distribution of food products in the village of Motyzhyn, Ukraine, which was until recently under the control of the Russian military (Vadim Ghirda/AP)

Mr Putin has said the attack is aimed at eliminating a security threat and demanded that Ukraine drop its bid to join the Nato military alliance of Western countries.

Ukraine insists it never posed any threat but has offered to officially declare itself neutral.

While western officials initially said they believed Mr Putin’s goal was to take Kyiv and potentially install a Kremlin-friendly government, Russian forces faced stiff resistance outside the capital and on other fronts, and have now retreated from some areas.

Moscow says it is currently focusing its offensive on the Donbas in the country’s east, where Russian-backed separatists have been fighting Ukrainian forces for years.

Britain’s defence ministry said on Monday that Russia continued to flood soldiers and mercenaries from the Wagner private military group into the Donbas.

It said Russian troops are still trying to take the region’s strategic port city of Mariupol, which has seen weeks of heavy fighting and some of the worst suffering of the war.

“Mariupol is almost certainly a key objective of the Russian invasion,” the ministry said, as it would provide a land corridor from Russia to the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow annexed in 2014.

On Monday, the Ukrainian military said its forces had retaken some towns in the northern Chernihiv region and humanitarian aid was being delivered.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

The US embassy in Kyiv closed over fears of a 'significant air attack'

US embassy in Kyiv closes over 'significant air attack' threat as Biden approves anti-personnel mines for Ukraine

Rafael Nadal

Rafael Nadal retires from tennis, as Spain defeat in Davis Cup brings curtain down on glittering career

Welcome to the Gemini era by Google

Google's AI chatbot Gemini tells user to 'please die' and 'you are a burden on society' in shock response

The C-Lion1 submarine telecommunications cable being laid to the bottom of the Baltic Sea by cable laying ship "Ile de Brehat" off the shore of Helsinki, Finland, in October 2015

Two undersea internet cables severed amid fears of Russian sabotage

Marius Borg Høiby with his mother Norwegian Crown Princess Mette-Marit

Son of Norwegian princess Marius Borg Høiby arrested on suspicion of rape

Sweden's Minister for Civil Defence Carl-Oskar Bohlin presents new version of preparedness booklet "If the crisis or war comes"

Sweden issues pamphlet telling citizens how to prepare for potential war as WWIII fears grow

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a new doctrine lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons.

Putin threatens to use nuclear weapons against the West if Ukraine fires US long-range missiles on Russian soil

Elon Musk 'clashed with Trump's legal adviser'

Elon Musk 'clashes with Trump legal adviser' at Mar-a-Lago over Cabinet picks

Russia has vowed a 'tangible response' to the use of long-range missiles on its territory

Russia vows 'tangible response' if Ukraine uses long-range missiles on its territory - and says 'US would be involved'

Joe Biden has said the US supports Ukrainian sovereignty

Defiant Biden says US 'supports Ukraine's sovereignty' after Russia's WW3 warning over long-range missile threat

Watch dramatic moment Ukrainian nursery teacher takes out incoming Russian missile with rocket launcher

Watch dramatic moment Ukrainian nursery teacher takes out incoming Russian missile with rocket launcher

Fury in Russia as Biden 'allows Ukraine to use long-range missiles'

Kremlin issues stark WWIII warning as Biden sparks outrage after 'allowing Ukraine to use long-range missiles in Russia'

Vladimir Shklyarov from the Mariinsky Ballet performs during a dress rehearsal of 'Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux' at the Saddlers Wells theatre in London in 2008

Ballet star Vladimir Shklyarov who criticised Putin’s Ukraine invasion dies in fall from building in St Petersburg

Donald Trump Jr accuses Joe Biden of trying to start WWIII

Donald Trump Jr accuses Joe Biden of trying to start WWIII after 'allowing Ukraine to fire US rockets inside Russia'

Two Brits have died in a collision in Murcia, Spain

Two Brits killed with a third critically injured after crash with 'drugs traffickers' speedboat on Spanish dual carriage-way

120 missiles and 90 drones were launched at Ukraine on Sunday.

Russia launches one of its 'largest air attacks' on Ukraine targeting 'sleeping civilians' and 'critical infrastructure'