War crime prosecutor of Kharkiv Oblast stands with forensic technician and policeman at the positioning of a mass burial in a forest during exhumation on September 16, 2022 in Izium, Ukraine.
Yevhenii Zavhorodnii | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images News | Getty Images
WASHINGTON – Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin said Wednesday that regional authorities have registered greater than 65,000 Russian war crimes since Moscow’s conflict began nearly a yr ago.
“We have now all witnessed with horror the evidence of atrocities committed in Bucha, Irpin, Mariupol, Izium, Kherson, Kharkiv regions and other liberated cities and towns,” Kostin said, adding that Ukrainian authorities have discovered mass burial sites in areas occupied by Russian troops.
“These crimes should not incidental or accidental, they include indiscriminate shelling of civilians, willful killing, torture, conflict-related sexual violence, looting and compelled displacement on a large scale,” he added in remarks on the Georgetown Law School in Washington.
Read more: UN report details horrifying Ukrainian accounts of rape, torture and executions by Russian troops
His comments add to an emerging picture of the horrors experienced during nearly a yr of war in Ukraine. The conflict has shown few signs of ending soon, whilst local and international officials attempt to probe potential crimes committed over recent months in Ukraine.
In a separate discussion with journalists, Kostin said he believed Kyiv was near gaining U.S. support to ascertain a special tribunal to prosecute Russia’s crimes of aggression.
Because potential war crimes cross a variety of jurisdictions, the International Criminal Court cannot prosecute them, or heads of state akin to Russian President Vladimir Putin. A special tribunal endorsed by the United Nations Security Council also seems unlikely, since Russia holds veto authority on all measures put forth by the 15-member group.
Beth van Schaack, President Joe Biden’s ambassador-at-large for global criminal justice, said on Wednesday that the U.S. is considering a proposal that may name an interim prosecutor to start out recording evidence of potential crimes that may very well be used later.
Kostin recently said European countries like France and the UK have agreed to assist create a special tribunal.
Russia has repeatedly denied that its troops have committed war crimes or deliberately targeted civilians. The Russian Embassy in Washington didn’t immediately reply to a request to comment.
Kostin outlined much more of what he described as Russian abuses. He said his teams have also documented greater than 14,000 Ukrainian children forced into adoption in Russia.
“This can be a direct policy geared toward demographic change by cutting out Ukrainian identity,” Kostin said.
“These actions are characteristics of the crime of genocide,” he added.
The death toll in Ukraine is mounting because the conflict persists. As of Monday, the United Nations had confirmed a minimum of 7,110 civilian deaths in Ukraine since Russia’s late-February invasion.
The Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said the death toll in Ukraine is probably going higher, since the armed conflict can delay fatality reports.
Kostin added that to date, greater than 75,000 buildings, including homes, schools and hospitals, have been reduced to rubble.
People keep warm by fires outside the principal rail terminal in Lviv, Ukraine.
Dan Kitwood | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Kostin also slammed Russian attempts to weaponize the winter season by targeting critical energy infrastructure across Ukrainian cities.
“Russia resorts to prohibited methods of warfare like weaponizing winter and aiming to starve, freeze and terrorize the civilian population in the entire territory of Ukraine,” Kostin said. He noted that roughly half of Ukraine’s energy sector has been destroyed by Russian shelling.
Last yr as winter approached the region, America’s top military officer called Moscow’s deliberate targeting of energy infrastructure in Ukraine a war crime.
U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley told reporters in November that the Kremlin’s “deliberate targeting of the civilian power grid, causing excessive collateral damage and unnecessary suffering on the civilian population,” was a war crime.
Read more: Pentagon says Moscow’s deliberate targeting of Ukrainian energy grids is a war crime
Milley on the time said that greater than 1 / 4 of Ukrainians are estimated to be without power throughout the country during winter.
Alongside Milley, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin on the time described Russia’s missile and rocket attacks on civilian infrastructure as “deliberate cruelty” and called on the Kremlin to finish its “war of alternative.”