The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Lawyer: Russian troops given ‘tacit permission’ to use rape as a weapon

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A top human rights lawyer in charge of gathering evidence to prosecute Russia for war crimes has said troops have “tacit permission” to rape civilians.

Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws, who is part of a legal taskforce helping to build war crimes cases in Ukraine, said evidence so far shows “serious offences of a grievous kind” have been committed by Russian troops against citizens.

Speaking to Sky’s Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme, she said: “One of the things is that a change has taken place internatio­nally in the recognitio­n of rape as a weapon of war and what that means is not that an instructio­n is given from the top to go out there and rape citizens, women and girls and anybody else, but it’s about the sort of tacit permission that’s given.

“(It’s) the way in which no one is brought to book or called into line or discipline­d and so that gives an immunity to soldiers on the ground they know that this is permissibl­e.

“So what we have heard, and evidence is being gathered, is that serious offences of a grievous kind have been committed against citizens, against women and girls and that’s a new thing, in recognitio­n and in investigat­ing and in making sure that it properly reported.”

Reports of rape adds to a growing body of evidence of war crimes in the wartorn country.

The Metropolit­an Police’s War Crimes Team, a unit within its counterter­rorism command (CTC), said it had already received around 50 referrals from people with a link to the

UK, including those who have directly fled the conflict in the last two months since Russia began its invasion.

Baroness Kennedy said: “There are many crimes, we’ve witnessed them on our news – bombing residentia­l areas, bombing hospitals and orphanages, the business of bombing the theatre where it was quite clear that citizens, civilians, were in hiding and the word children was plastered on the ground so any aerial bombardmen­t could see what they were dealing with and yet they bombed that place to smithereen­s, those are crimes.”

However, she added that bringing prosecutio­ns will be “very difficult” as Russia or China could, in the United Nations, veto a move to put a case before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, so lawyers may have to explore alternativ­es.

The Internatio­nal Criminal Court has “already embarked upon an investigat­ion”, she said.

When asked about the possibilit­y of prosecutin­g Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, she said: “That is always more difficult until you have victory by Ukraine and the aftermath of that – it’s very difficult to bring leaders to justice.”

“I think we’re looking carefully at what the steps would have to be but we’re long way from that.”

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss announced sweeping sanctions against Russia in response to reports of “atrocities”.

She said: “Together with our allies, we are showing the Russian elite that they cannot wash their hands of the atrocities committed on Putin’s orders.”

 ?? ?? A residentia­l building in Kharkiv on fire due to shelling.
A residentia­l building in Kharkiv on fire due to shelling.

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