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Russian annexations will worsen rights violations, says UN
People attend a rally and a concert marking the annexation of four regions of Ukraine Russian troops occupy at Red Square in central Moscow September 30, 2022. — AFP pic

GENEVA, Oct 5 — Russia’s claimed annexation of Ukraine territory will only exacerbate human rights violations, the UN rights office said yesterday as it outlined the "unspeakable suffering and devastation” inflicted on Ukrainians.

Christian Salazar Volkmann, presenting a report on rights in Ukraine to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, said UN experts had documented "a range of violations of the rights to life, liberty and security”.

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"The Russian Federation’s wide-scale armed attack has resulted in a dire human rights situation across Ukraine,” the UN rights office’s field operations chief said.

"The people in Ukraine have experienced unspeakable suffering and devastation.”

He said the office’s Human Rights Monitoring Mission, which has been present in Ukraine since 2014, had documented 6,114 civilians killed since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, stressing though that "the real figures are likely considerably higher.”

"The Russian Federation’s armed attack has caused the death of thousands and brought about widespread destruction of civilian objects and infrastructure,” Salazar Volkmann said.

And he warned that the situation would only worsen as Russia pushes forward with annexing the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Lugansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, following hastily arranged referendums dismissed as a "sham” by the West.

"With the purported annexation... the Russian Federation has taken steps which deepen rather than resolve the conflict, and exacerbate the human rights violations associated with it,” Salazar Volkmann said.

Scale of damage, destruction

The UN rights office’s 34th report on the human rights situation in Ukraine, covering February 1 to July 31 this year, shows that civilians were bearing the brunt of the hostilities, Salazar Volkmann told the council.

He said the vast majority of documented civilian casualties were caused by explosive weapons being used in populated areas, "for the most part by Russian forces and affiliated armed groups”.

"The sheer scale of damage and destruction is a strong indication that violations have occurred,” he said.

He said people were being "forced to live in degrading conditions”, unable to access their rights to housing, education, health, food and water.

The official said "disturbing accounts” were now emerging of violations in detention, of both civilians and prisoners of war, while enforced disappearances and arbitrary detention had become "widespread” in territory controlled by Russia and its proxies.

"Appalling reports of torture and ill-treatment” of civilians and POWs continue, with two documented cases of Ukrainian servicemen having been "tortured to death”, he said.

‘Sham referenda at gunpoint’

In response, Ukrainian ambassador Yevheniia Filipenko said: "Innocent people are being killed, their homes, their lives are being destroyed on the direct orders from terrorist number one.”

"Russian forces are sending Ukrainian citizens to filtration camps before forcibly relocating them to Russia,” she told the council.

"Russia organised the illegal mass adoption of Ukrainian children after they had been forcibly transferred,” saying 200,000 children were affected.

British ambassador Simon Manley said the report made clear the "horrifying scope” of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s violations of international law.

"Aggression abroad, repression at home. There is one simple way to end the suffering in Ukraine: President Putin, bring your troops home. End the war, respect the law,” he said.

US ambassador Michele Taylor said Russia’s war had caused "needless death, abuse and suffering”, and Washington was "appalled” by reports of Russian mistreatment of POWs.

European Union ambassador Lotte Knudsen condemned the violations of international law and said the "atrocities, destruction and suffering” in Ukraine had caused a "global economic, food and energy crisis”.

German deputy ambassador Hans-Peter Jugel said there could be no "impunity for these atrocities” and Berlin would "never accept the results of the sham referenda carried out at gunpoint”.

Russia’s spokeswoman in the council slammed the "one-sided and imbalanced character of this report which reflects Western approaches to reporting on the Ukraine crisis”.

She did not address the report’s points concerning Russia but listed allegations against Ukraine.

She regretted that the UN rights office "presents this information in a blurred and vague fashion which only gives free rein to the Kyiv regime and facilitates its impunity”.

Venezuela complained of selectivity, politicisation and double standards, and Syria said the report was "imbalanced and reflects a one-sided viewpoint”, sentiments echoed by Belarus. — AFP

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