Mariupol’s True Horror is Yet to Emerge
“To understand what's happening, you have to multiply Bucha and Irpin and Borodyanka a hundred times.”
“To understand what's happening, you have to multiply Bucha and Irpin and Borodyanka a hundred times.”
Humanitarian workers killed by Russian troops as they brought aid to Borodyanka.
Residents believe the Russians attacked so viciously because of spirited resistance by the local territorial defence.
Residents tell how Russian soldiers left civilians to die in the basement of a bombed out building.
The coastal city would be preparing for the tourist season. Instead, there is little food, fuel or heat, and you can be killed for refusing to give a soldier your phone.
In Russian-occupied areas, the modus operandi has become random torture and the execution of civilians, seemingly on a whim.
But the international community’s unprecedented unity and support comes in sharp contrast to their response three decades ago.
Locals recount random, unaccountable violence against civilians in clear evidence of war crimes.
Concerns that BiH could be next on Russian president Vladimir Putin’s list are fueled by ethnic divisions among the country’s politicians.