Russian soldiers have been accused of carrying out “genocide” in the Ukrainian town of Bucha amid harrowing evidence of mass graves, torture and bodies lying in the streets as Kremlin forces pull back from Kyiv.
Ukraine officials say some victims were shot in the head with their hands tied behind their back and there has been international outrage and allegations of war crimes levelled at the Kremlin.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called Russian soldiers “killers, executioners, rapists, marauders” while Moscow categorically denied killing civilians in Bucha.
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Once a popular commuter town located around 16 miles outside the capital, Bucha was ravaged by heavy fighting before being liberated by Ukrainian forces over the weekend.
Key developments:
There has been international outcry over the scenes of death and destruction revealed over the weekend as Ukrainian forces have pushed further outwards from Kyiv and liberated surrounding towns.
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Images emerged on Sunday of Ukrainian civilians lying on the streets of Bucha, with witnesses saying the victims were killed by Russian forces without any apparent provocation.
Bucha’s mayor, Anatoliy Fedoruk, said more than 300 residents had been killed, while Ukrainian prosecutors said they have found 410 bodies in towns near the capital.
Some of the victims had their hands tied and were shot in the back of the head, Ukrainian authorities said.
One resident of Bucha said Russian troops went from building to building and took people out of the basements where they were hiding.
He said soldiers checked their phones for evidence of anti-Russian activity and took them away or shot them.
Zelenskyy calls Russian soldiers ‘killers, executioners, rapists, marauders’
President Zelenskyy accused Moscow forces of carrying out “a genocide”, saying that a “concentrated evil has visited our land”.
He said: “The killers, executioners, rapists, marauders who call themselves an army – and who deserve only death after what they’ve done.”
Russia’s Defence Ministry rejected the accusations of atrocities against civilians in Bucha and other suburbs of Kyiv.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also rejected the allegations, describing the scenes outside Kyiv as a “stage-managed anti-Russian provocation.”
Moscow will push for a meeting of the UN’s Security Council to discuss what it called “Ukrainian provocations” in Bucha.
Kremlin forces focusing on Donbas region, UK MoD says
Allegations of war crimes come as Russian forces are continuing to “consolidate and reorganise” their efforts as they refocus their offensive on the Donbas region in Ukraine’s east, where they are being joined by Wagner mercenaries, according to the UK’s Ministry of Defence.
Meanwhile UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss will visit Poland on Monday to call for tougher sanctions on Russia as Western countries work together to ramp up economic pressure on the Kremlin.
In a message on Twitter, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: “All the tanks and guns in Vladimir Putin’s arsenal will never break the spirit of Ukraine’s people or conquer their homeland.”
“Britain will never waver from supporting our friends”, he added.
It comes as the UK leader seeks to galvanise a tougher response from Western allies, including NATO members, against Russia.
Meanwhile, the European Council’s President Charles Michel said the European Union is preparing further sanctions following the actions of Russian forces in Bucha.