Bodies of more than 500 civilians recovered in recaptured Ukrainian territories: police

Unidentified graves of civilians and Ukrainian soldiers are marked with a cross in a cemetery in the recently liberated town of Izium, Ukraine, Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022. At the mass grave site created by the Russians and discovered in the woods of Izium, at least 30 of the 447 bodies recently excavated bore visible marks of torture – bound hands, close gunshot wounds, knife wounds and broken limbs, according to the Kharkiv regional prosecutor’s office. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Ukrainian police found the bodies of 534 civilians, some with signs of torture, in the Kharkiv region.

Of the 534 dead civilians whose bodies were recovered, 226 were women and 19 were children, according to The New York Times.

Serhii Bolvinov, the investigative head of the Kharkiv police force, told reporters on Thursday that 447 of the bodies were found at a mass grave in Izyum, which was recaptured from Russia by the Ukrainian army last month.

Kharkiv Gov. Oleh Synyehubov announced in late September that at least 30 of the bodies exhumed from the Izyum burial site, including both military members and civilians, showed “traces” of torture.

Many other bodies showed “signs of violent death,” Synyehubov said at the time.

Digging up the mass grave in Izyum was a rerun of what Ukrainian officials did in Bucha earlier this year, where they also found evidence of torture.

“The most common torture techniques were electric shocks and severe beatings with sticks and other objects,” Bolvinov said of suspected torture in Izyum, according to the Times.

“There are cases of pulling out nails and using gas masks to restrict breathing.”

Police investigators have identified 22 sites across the Kharkiv province that may have been used as torture chambers by the Russian military.

At one site, the basement of a private house, officials found items including ropes, Ukrainian army jackets, a gas mask, a dildo, dentures and gold teeth, Bolvinov said.

“We have witnesses who heard screams from the basement, pleas for help,” he told reporters.

“Sometimes, after the screams, the locals heard bursts of shots, after which the screams stopped.”

This new evidence of human rights violations follows weeks of victories for the Ukrainian army, which has recaptured hundreds of towns in the past month.

The successful pushback of troops in Ukraine has forced Russian President Vladimir Putin to take more drastic measures in his onslaught against the smaller country, including the controversial move of instituting a military draft for most Russian men.

Tags Bucha human rights violations Izyum Kharkiv Russia Russia-Ukraine war The New York Times Ukraine Vladimir Putin Vladimir Putin

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