Humanitarian workers need access to people who have been taken to Russia amid that country’s invasion of Ukraine, the United Nations Human Rights Council has said.
It cited allegations that some have been forced across the border.
The Geneva-based council used a special session on Ukraine to condemn atrocities documented by experts in Russian-occupied territories.
A resolution from the council pointed to cases of torture, shootings, and sexual violence, among other crimes documented by a UN team on ground.
The UN’s top rights body also called on Russia to immediately allow humanitarian workers access to people trafficked from Ukraine to Russia, or areas controlled or occupied by the Russian army.
Since the war began in late February, there have been reports of mayors, local officials, citizens, and children being abducted, detained or disappeared as Russia tries to assert its control.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said investigators had found the bodies of 1,000 civilians in the Kiev region alone.
“Some of these people were killed in hostilities, others appeared to have been summarily executed,” she said.
Thirty-three of the 47 member countries voted in favour of a resolution that demanded Russia ends its hostilities and for an independent international inquiry to look into a pattern of abuses with the aim of holding those responsible accountable.
Only China and Eritrea voted against, while another 12 countries abstained.
Bachelet said at the start of the one-day session to address Ukraine’s deteriorating rights situation that many of the abuses under investigation “may amount to war crimes.”
In New York, the United Nations Children’s Fund UNICEF said at least 100 children died last month in the war, with the real number likely much higher.
Meanwhile, Russian forces stepped up attacks in eastern Ukraine and appear to have made some territorial gains in the Donbass region, according to the Ukrainian military.
Protecting self-declared pro-Russian republics in Ukraine’s east was among reasons given by the Kremlin for sending in troops.
Days before the war started, Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized the republics as independent entities, to Kiev’s outrage.
“The enemy continues its attack efforts in the Eastern Operation Zone with the aim of establishing full control over the Donetsk, Luhansk, and Kherson regions and maintaining the land corridor to the temporarily occupied Crimea,” the Ukrainian General Staff said in its situation report on Thursday.
According to the report, Russian attacks in the Donbass were focused on the towns of Sievierodonetsk, Lyman, Bakhmut, Avdiivka, and Kurakhove, as well as Rubizhne, which is already largely occupied by Russian forces.
In the hopes of advancing on the small town of Liman, Russian troops have been attempting to set up pontoon bridges across the Siverskyi Donets River.
The Ukrainian General Staff said that the pontoons had been destroyed.
Meanwhile, Moscow is reinforcing its troops on the front line around the city of Sloviansk, one of the most important targets of the Russian offensive in the Donbass.
According to the Ukrainian report, around 300 additional Russian military vehicles have been deployed in the area ahead of fresh attacks.
The report said there had been few changes to the situation on the ground in the port city of Mariupol, where Ukrainian fighters remain entrenched in the Azovstal steelworks.
Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said Kiev was starting a new round of talks with Russia aimed at freeing Ukrainian fighters from the steelworks.
“We would like to have a deal signed on how the evacuation from Azovstal will proceed – we are ready to sign,” Vereshchuk said, as reported by Ukrayinska Pravda.
Ukraine is prepared to exchange Russian prisoners of war for the wounded from Azovstal.
Russia has so far refused any evacuation of the last Ukrainian fighters in the sprawling steelworks in the port city of Mariupol, and has demanded the Ukrainians in the plant surrender.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called Russia’s attacks on schools “simply sick” after a school in Chernihiv was hit.
He said 570 health facilities including 101 hospitals had been destroyed in Russian attacks since the invasion began.
UN Human Rights Council Seeks Access to Abductees in Russia
Related Posts
Add A Comment