Russian Barbarism:
Executing POWs
Since the start of the Russo-Ukraine
War of 2014-15, news and social media have been filled an ample of amount
of stories about Russian war crimes
committed against the civilian
population and soldiers. The destruction of MH-17 is perhaps the most blatant example of this.
The latest case pertains to documented evidence that Russian
troops have been executing Ukrainian prisoners of war in clear violation of the
Geneva Convention.
Article 13 of the
convention regarding treatment of prisoners of war unmistakably declares:
“Prisoners of war must at all times be humanely treated. Any
unlawful act or omission by the Detaining Power causing death or seriously
endangering the health of a prisoner of war in its custody is prohibited, and
will be regarded as a serious breach of the present Convention. In particular,
no prisoner of war may be subjected to physical mutilation or to medical or
scientific experiments of any kind which are not justified by the medical,
dental or hospital treatment of the prisoner concerned and carried out in his
interest.
“Likewise, prisoners of war must at all times be protected,
particularly against acts of violence or intimidation and against insults and
public curiosity
“Measures of reprisal against prisoners of war are
prohibited.”
News of this shocking
evidence was brought to light last week by Amnesty International. The global human rights nongovernmental
organization, which viewed a video account, described the incidents as “execution-style” killings by what it
called pro-Russian armed groups in Donbas.
“The new evidence of these summary killings confirms what we have suspected for a long
time. The question now is: what are the separatist leaders going to do
about it?” Denis Krivosheev, Europe
and Central Asia Deputy Director at Amnesty International, said in a statement.
“The torture, ill-treatment and killing of captured,
surrendered or wounded soldiers are war
crimes. These claims must be promptly, thoroughly and impartially
investigated, and the perpetrators prosecuted in fair trials by recognized
authorities.”
Amnesty International favors use of “pro-Russian” but the
murderers could just as easily have been Russian regular army commanders.
Footage reviewed by Amnesty International shows Ukrainian
soldier Ihor Branovytsky, one of the
defenders of Donetsk airport, taken
captive and interrogated. The video, posted on YouTube, shows signs that he was
hit in the face. He remained in captivity until he was killed. For their
dedication to defending the airport, Ukrainian soldiers were nicknamed “cyborgs” – which has evolved into a modern-day
badge of honor in Ukraine.
According to Amnesty International, several individuals
claim to have seen Branovytsky being shot and killed point-blank by a separatist commander. His body was returned
to his family earlier this month and he was buried in Kyiv on April 3. Ukrainian
security services have opened an investigation into his killing.
Amnesty International has also confirmed seeing other videos
documenting the captivity, and pictures of the dead bodies, of at least three other members of the Ukrainian armed
forces, reportedly being held in a morgue in Donetsk. There are signs of bullet wounds to their heads
and upper parts of their bodies, apparently the result of execution-style
killings. The soldiers were captured by Russian forces in Debaltseve during February
12-18, when the defending Ukrainian forces were encircled there.
Amnesty International cited a report in the Ukrainian
newspaper Kyiv Post on April 6, which published a phone interview, reportedly
made with Arseniy Pavlov, better known by his nom-de-guerre “Motorola.” Pavlov, who claims to be a
Russian national and the leader of the pro-Russian armed group known as “Sparta
Battalion” operating in eastern Ukraine, claimed he had “shot dead” 15 soldiers captured from the Ukrainian armed
forces. He is believed to have killed Ihor Branovytsky.
“This chilling ‘confession’ from a separatist fighter,
alongside video evidence and testimony from witnesses, and the mounting
evidence of abuses of captives by both sides, highlights the urgent need for an
independent investigation into this and all other allegations of abuses in this
conflict which began a year ago,” said Krivosheev.
Amnesty International said this type of behavior is tantamount
to a war crime.
“Summary killings are
a war crime, plain and simple. The leaders of the self-styled ‘Donetsk
People’s Republic’ in eastern Ukraine must send their members a clear message:
those who fight with them or on their behalf must respect the laws of war. They
must urgently remove from their ranks anyone suspected of responsibility for
ordering or committing serious violations of international humanitarian law and
human rights abuses, and fully cooperate with any independent investigation,” said
Krivosheev.
Russian terrorists in Ukraine are holding at least 300 Ukrainian POWs, according to Ukrainian
Defense Ministry spokesman Yuri Tandyt and it’s believed that some of them have
been transported across the border to an
uncertain fate into Russia.
Under the Minsk
ceasefire accords, POWs and other detainees were to be returned to their
national representatives.
The Associated Press, in fulfilling its journalistic
obligation of presenting both sides of the issue, reported that Eduard Basurin, a spokesman for Russian
mercenary terrorists, denied the claims, saying that footage of soldiers being
taken prisoner could not serve as evidence. “Accusations without facts are
nothing. Nobody has shot anybody," Basurin was quoted as saying.
Can you imagine a correspondent or news service during World
War II, such as Edward R. Murrow,
quoting a spokesman for the Nazis, the Gestapo or SS who denied Nazi war crimes
and killing Jews en masse?
After World War II,
Nazis were brought to trial in Nuremberg for war crimes and crimes
against humanity. Ukraine and the free world must immediately begin
preparations to bring Russians who committed war crimes in Ukraine – those who
actually shot the POWs and those who gave the orders – to trial in The Hague. This issue cannot be swept under the diplomatic
rug and the execution of Ukrainian POWs
as well as the Holodomor should not
be granted statutes of limitation for the sake of improving relations with
Moscow.