Guernsey Press

Russian court convicts 23 Ukrainian captives on terror charges

The defendants included 14 current or former fighters of the Azov brigade, which Russia designated a terrorist group, and support workers.

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Russia has convicted 23 captured Ukrainians on terrorism charges stemming from the war in Ukraine in a military court trial that Kyiv denounced as a sham and a violation of international law.

The defendants included current or former fighters with the elite Azov brigade, which Russia designated a terrorist group, and those who worked there as cooks or support personnel, according to Russian media reports and rights activists.

Memorial, a prominent Russian human rights group, designated the defendants as political prisoners. It said some of them were captured in 2022 during fighting in the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol, where they held out at the Azovstal steel mill under siege by Russian troops.

Others were detained as they tried to leave the city after it was overrun by Russian forces, the group said.

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Ukrainian servicemen leaving the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service/AP)

One other defendant died in custody last year and the case against him was closed.

All had been charged with staging a violent coup and organising the activities of a terrorist organisation. Some faced an additional charge of training to carry out terrorist activities.

Those convicted were given prison sentences ranging from 13 to 23 years.

The 12 men still in Russian custody will serve their their time in maximum security penal colonies, according to the court. Russian independent news site Mediazona said all 12 plan to appeal against the verdict.

Memorial said “none of the defendants in the case are accused of any war crimes: they are all being tried for the very fact of serving” in Azov at one time or another.

Ukraine’s human rights envoy Dmytro Lubinets denounced the proceedings when they began in June 2023 as “another sham trial” held for Russia’s “own amusement”.

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Lawyers of Ukrainians captured by Russia during hostilities in Ukraine sit in front of the defendant’s cage in Rostov-on-Don (AP)

“It is obvious to everyone that those who should be in the dock are not those defending themselves but those who initiated the aggression, those who invaded foreign land with weapons, and those who arrived with tanks on the territory of an independent state.”

The same month, Ukraine’s presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said the trial of combatants amounted to “an official war crime” warranting a response from the International Criminal Court.

Petro Yatsenko, a representative of the Ukrainian Co-ordination Centre for the Treatment of PoWs, echoed his sentiment in remarks quoted by the Hromadske news outlet, saying the proceedings violated the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war.

Rostov-on-Don is home to Russia’s Southern Military District, about 60 miles east of the Ukrainian border.

Mediazona reported that the defendants told the court of of abuse behind bars, saying they were severely beaten and had bones broken, were interrogated with bags over their heads, were given food laced with household chemicals, and were forced to stand all day long and sing the Russian anthem.

These allegations are in line with reports by Russian and international human rights groups that detail systematic abuse of Ukrainian PoWs and civilian captives in Russian custody.

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