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Emergency personnel examined the area around a residential building that was hit by a Russian missile strike in Lviv, Ukraine, July 6. The missile attack killed at least four people, injured 37 others and destroyed hundreds of homes, apartments and other buildings.
Emergency personnel examined the area around a residential building that was hit by a Russian missile strike in Lviv, Ukraine, July 6. The missile attack killed at least four people, injured 37 others and destroyed hundreds of homes, apartments and other buildings.
Photo Credit: Roman Baluk | Reuters

Nonpartisan groups issue report that documents atrocities committed by Russia

The 57-page report concludes that Russia has “escalated its efforts to commit genocide” in Ukraine

A new report on Russian atrocities in Ukraine is both “the worst possible news” and “welcome,” a Ukrainian Catholic archbishop told OSV News.

The Russian Federation’s Escalating Commission of Genocide in Ukraine: A Legal Analysis” was released July 26 by the New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington, and the Raoul Wallenberg Center for Human Rights, a Montreal-based nonpartisan global coalition for human rights advocacy and justice.

Rescuers carried a victim at the site of a residential building hit by a Russian missile strike in Lviv, Ukraine, July 6.
Photo Credits: Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine via Reuters
The 57-page report, which follows a similar report jointly issued by the two organizations in May 2022, concludes that “the Russian Federation has not only committed but escalated its efforts to commit genocide” in Ukraine, wrote Azeem Ibrahim, senior director of the mass atrocities and law portfolio at New Lines, in the foreword to the document.

“It is ironic to welcome a report on genocide,” Metropolitan Archbishop Borys Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in the U.S. said in an email. “But it is good that the report is being made and it should be brought to the widest possible audiences.”

The report, covering the period Feb. 24, 2022, (the date of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine) through June 15 of this year, found that “an escalated pattern of systematic atrocities” by Russia in Ukraine constitutes a “violation of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.”

The 1948 Convention — ratified by 153 nations including Russia and the U.S. — defines genocide as any of five types of acts committed with the intent to destroy, either wholly or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

Those acts are killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting conditions to physically destroy the group in whole or in part, imposing measures to prevent births, and forcibly transferring a group’s children to another group.

Russia has demonstrated “willful, systematic violations of all five prohibited acts” in the Genocide Convention, the report found.

Genocide — along with conspiracy to commit, direct and public incitement, attempted acts and complicity — is punishable under international law.

The Genocide Convention also imposes a legal obligation on ratifying states to prevent genocide, even beyond their borders, once they become aware of a serious risk for genocide. The New Lines/Raoul Wallenberg report found that the “threshold was found to have been exceeded” in its May 2022 report and continues to be exceeded.

“It is incumbent upon all of us” to “stop the wave of genocide being perpetrated by the Russian invaders” in Ukraine, said Archbishop Gudziak, urging “prayer, advocacy, engagement and help.”

The report highlighted Russian forces’ killing Ukrainian men, women and children through “summary executions, missile strikes, shelling, torture-induced deaths, targeting (of) evacuation caravans, and killing by omission.”

Since its February 2022 full-scale invasion, which continues attacks it initiated in 2014, Russia has killed more than 9,444 Ukrainian civilians and injured some 16,940, while committing close to 102,300 documented war crimes.

At least 2.5 million Ukrainians have been forcibly taken to the Russian Federation, and close to 19,600 children are being held in Russian “reeducation” camps, with the actual number for the latter feared to be much higher.

“Extensive, industrialized torture” as well as “widespread rape with extreme brutality and other forms of conflict-related sexual violence by Russian forces” have been documented throughout Ukraine, “across gender and vast age differences, from small children to the elderly,” said the report.

Sexual violence — documented to have been committed in some cases under direct order by Russian officers — also works to prevent births among Ukrainians, due to genital mutilation and psychological trauma, said the report.

Russia’s relentless shelling of civilian residences and infrastructure, reckless occupation of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, and widespread environmental damage to Ukraine through munitions, land mines and the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam all create conditions designed to destroy Ukrainians as a whole, said the report.

Russian state media has accelerated its incitement to genocide, said the report, with Kremlin media personalities calling for the wholesale extermination of Ukrainians, denouncing them as “bestial” while alternately declaring them Russian by nature. State media also relies on “accusation in a mirror,” a tactic whereby Russia accuses Ukraine of committing or planning atrocities for which Russia itself is responsible.

The report said the popular Russian phrase “we can do it again” has become a rallying cry for such crimes by Russia in Ukraine. Once a slogan for Russia’s commemorations of its World War II legacy, the phrase has evolved into “a jingoistic declaration that historical violence and patterns of atrocities can and should be carried out against Ukrainians,” said the report.

Mary Ellen O’Connell, professor of law and international peace studies at the University of Notre Dame, said in an email that “while there is likely a good case that Russia has breached the (Genocide) Convention, the more important focus now should be on the violation of the United Nations Charter prohibition on the use of force.”

As the founding document of the U.N., the charter specifies that all U.N. members “shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”

“There is no doubt Russia has committed one of the most egregious breaches of the Charter since 1945,” said O’Connell. “That violation has led to all the human rights violations and war crimes that have followed.”


“The Russian Federation’s Escalating Commission of Genocide in Ukraine: A Legal Analysis” can be read at stlreview.com/3YOVQOk

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