The Economist April 9th 2022 27
Europe
Ukraine
After the battle
T
he lasttime that Andriy Dvornikov
spoke to his commonlaw wife was on
March 5th. He called, speaking very quiet
ly, to say he was in trouble. He had been
trapped at a Ukrainian checkpoint in Bu
cha, a suburb to the northwest of Kyiv,
when it came under artillery fire. He was
taking shelter in the basement of a nearby
house along with seven other men.
One of them, Ivan Skyba, described
what happened next. Russian soldiers
found the group later that day and moved
them to a base. They were told to take their
clothes off and lie face down. Their captors
searched their telephones and bodies for
symbols and tattoos. To make the Ukrai
nians talk, the Russians killed one of
them— “a short, bespectacled guy from
IvanoFrankivsk”, in Mr Skyba’s words.
Mr Dvornikov, who had fought in Don
bas in 201516, had a paratrooper’s tattoo.
After a few hours of torture, an order was
issued to kill them. A soldier asked his
commander what he should do. The an
swer was “yebashit” ( “fucking do them
in”), but “do it away from the base.” Mr Sky
ba says they were led to the side of the
building and shot. He took a bullet in his
side, but it went through his body. He sur
vived by playing dead on the concrete
floor. As soon as he heard there were no
voices, he fled over a fence to a nearby
home. Other Russian soldiers later found
him there, but spared his life. Witnesses in
Bucha stress that some Russian soldiers
were polite. “Some of them even said sor
ry,” says one.
As Russia’s “liberators” have retreated
from Kyiv back towards the Belarusian bor
der, they have left a landscape of atrocities.
In all, said Ukraine’s prosecutorgeneral on
April 3rd, 410 civilians had been killed
around Kyiv. As investigators collected evi
dence of war crimes and bodies were put
into black plastic bags, The Economistwas
able to verify reports of what appears to
have been a summary execution.
We found nine bodies lying at the side
of a builder’s yard in Bucha that had been
used as a Russian base. All had gunshot
wounds to the head, chest or both. At least
two of the victims had their hands tied be
hind their backs. The smell of decomposi
tion, among other things, suggested they
were killed before Ukrainian forces liberat
ed Bucha on March 31st.
Such massacres have shocked the
world. “Genocide”, Ukraine’s President Vo
lodymyr Zelensky called it. The American
president, Joe Biden, said that what hap
pened in Bucha was a war crime and that
Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, should
face an international tribunal for it,
though the chances of that seem remote.
The Kremlin said the whole thing was a
“heinous provocation of Ukrainian radi
cals” and cynically demanded a un Securi
ty Council meeting. At it, Mr Zelensky said:
“We are dealing with a state that turns its
veto at the un Security Council into [a]
right to [cause] death.” The eu swiftly pro
posed new sanctions, which would ban
Russian coal and close its ports to Russian
vessels. But it stopped short of imposing
an embargo on oil and gas exports, the
cornerstones of Russia’s economy.
The atrocities in Bucha fit a pattern.
KYIV
As Russian soldiers retreat, they leave evidence of war crimes
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