Ukraine Accuses Russia of Executing Civilians; Moscow Denies Claim
Ukraine Accuses Russia of Executing Civilians; Moscow Denies Claim

By Jack Phillips

Ukrainian officials on April 3 claimed that Ukrainian civilians were massacred by Russian forces in the city of Bucha, located near Kyiv, as Western powers said they were preparing more sanctions against Moscow.

The “Bucha massacre proves that Russian hatred towards Ukrainians is beyond anything Europe has seen since WWII,” Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Twitter as he posted photos of dead civilians that were allegedly targeted by Russian forces. The Epoch Times couldn’t immediately verify the photos.

“The only way to stop this: help Ukraine kick Russians out as soon as possible. Partners know our needs. Tanks, combat aircraft, heavy air defense systems. Provide them NOW,” Kuleba wrote, adding that the “Bucha massacre was” a “deliberate” attack on civilians.

Hours later, the Russian Ministry of Defense, however, denied Ukraine’s allegations.

“All photographs and video materials published by the Kyiv regime, allegedly showing some kind of ‘crimes’ by Russian military personnel in the town of Bucha … are yet another provocation,” the ministry said on April 3, according to state-run media.

“It’s particularity concerning that all the bodies of people whose images were published by the Kyiv regime, after at least four days, have not stiffened, do not have characteristic cadaveric spots, and have fresh blood in their wounds,” it added.

The ministry said that the incident apparently involving bodies was “staged by the Kyiv regime for Western media, as was the case with the [fake news from the] Mariupol maternity clinic.” The Epoch Times couldn’t independently verify Russia’s claims.

Meanwhile, Bucha Mayor Anatoliy Fedoruk showed a Reuters team on the ground two corpses who had their arms tied with cloth. Fedoruk also suggested that Chechen—not ethnically Russian—fighters were responsible for the alleged massacre as they controlled Bucha for the past month.

Ramzan Kadyrov, the head of Chechnya—a mostly Islamic region in Russia’s Caucasus region—confirmed that Chechen troops were sent to Ukraine after the Feb. 24 invasion started.

A local man walks past a damaged armored personal carrier, as Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues, in the town of Makariv, in the Kyiv region of Ukraine, on April 1, 2022. (Serhii Mykhalchuk/Reuters)

One corpse appeared to have his hands bound with the white cloth, and to have been shot in the mouth, according to Reuters, which didn’t upload or provide the photos. The news agency also said that it was “not immediately able to verify the mayor’s allegations.”

“Any war has some rules of engagement for civilians. The Russians have demonstrated that they were consciously killing civilians,” Fedoruk said.

Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense posted footage that allegedly showed dead civilians, including “some with hands tied behind their backs, their bodies scattered in the streets of the city.”

Previously, the Kremlin has denied allegations of war crimes in Ukraine, while pointing out that some Ukrainian nationalist factions have committed crimes and tortured Russian prisoners of war during the conflict. Human Rights Watch said last week that allegations of Russians being tortured or abused would be tantamount to war crimes.

Last month, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters during a conference call that “we categorically deny this,” when questioned about allegations that Russian forces targeted civilian infrastructure with certain types of munitions.

As allegations of the massacre spread online, top European officials indicated that more economic warfare is needed.

“Shocked by haunting images of atrocities committed by Russian army in Kyiv liberated region,” Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, wrote on Twitter, adding that there is an effort underway “in gathering the necessary evidence for pursuit in international courts.”

“Further EU sanctions and support are on their way,” he said. It isn’t clear what type of sanctions are being readied.

Several U.S. Congress members suggested further sanctions.

“War crimes. We cannot turn away from this horror,” Rep. Peter Meijer (R-Mich.) wrote on Twitter. “We cannot let those who perpetrated such unspeakable violence against civilians escape justice.”

Ukrainian officials on April 2 asserted that their forces took over areas around Kyiv, including Bucha, and had complete control of the region for the first time since Feb. 24. About a week before that, Russian Defense Ministry officials said Moscow would pull its forces from Kyiv and Chernihiv to focus on the Donbas area in eastern Ukraine.

Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs hasn’t responded to a request for comment.

This story has been updated to include a statement from the Russian Ministry of Defense.

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