Russia

Russia has rejected claims that its army was behind atrocities against civilians of a Kyiv suburb amid widespread international outrage, claiming the footage was staged following Russian forces retreat from the area.Ukraine calls the harrowing footage that emerged from the town of Bucha near Kyiv on Sunday evidence of a massacre by the Russian army.Ukrainian prosecutors said at least 400 bodies have been recovered so far.The images of dozens of bodies in civilian clothing scattered in the streets and piled in mass graves have galvanized calls to investigate the deaths as war crimes as well as for a fresh round of sanctions on Moscow.But Russia has doubled down, with both officials and state media throwing out a number of theories aimed at discrediting the claims as more evidence of civilian killings emerged.The Kremlin said the footage is not to be trusted and should be looked at with considerable doubt.Our specialists from the Defense Ministry have found signs of video forgery and different kinds of fakes, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.Russian officials including Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov repeated claims that the footage from Bucha was staged, possibly with Western involvement but did not provide any evidence for this.The Russian Defense Ministryministry said that all Russian units withdrew from Bucha on March 30, a day after Russias military announced it would be significantly reducing activity in northern Ukraine.
It also claimed that no civilians were harmed while Russian forces controlled the town.Moscow called for a UN Security Council meeting on the heinous provocation it blamed on Ukrainian radicals, but its request was rejected.Meanwhile, Russias top investigative body ordered a probe into those who it said were spreading fakes about the alleged atrocities.
Under a newly passed law, anyone found guilty of distributingfake information about the Russian military faces up to 15 years in prison.On Russia's top search engine, Yandex,users are being warned that some results for Bucha have been omitted in compliance with Russian legislation, according to a screenshotshared by journalists.An anchor on Russian state broadcaster Channel One claimedSunday that one "extra" can be seen raising his arm,and the other gets up, thinking that he had already played his role.The independent Mediazona news websitedebunked both these claims, saying the raised arm was a speck on the windshield and the standing victim was a distortion of the sideview mirror.In a broadcast onRossia 1, pro-Kremlin pundit Vladimir Solovyov accused Ukraine and the West ofplaying the Srebrenica card in Yugoslavia on us [] The British are primarily working there because it appears this entire provocation was thought up by the Britons.He didn't provide evidence for this.State media also reported unsubstantiated theories that Ukraine's military had shelled Bucha following Russia's withdrawal; that Kyiv stageda witch hunt for those who collaborated with the occupation forces; or that the dead bodies were actually Russian troops who had been killed in earlier fighting.One state media anchor even alleged that the victims were some kind of road traffic offenders.The West is using Bucha to legalize future purges in areas previously occupied by the Russian army.
The people were killed by Ukrainian forces because they didnt resist the Russians.
The West is thus giving Ukraine approval to extrajudicially kill those they deem traitors,Rossia 1 host Olga Skabeyeva said.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Trump Officials Alarmed by Witkoff’s Solo Talks With Putin – NYP


Russian Police Raid Gyms and Martial Arts Clubs Amid Spring Conscription Drive


Medvedev Warns of ‘Vanishing’ Ukraine After U.S. Signs Minerals Deal With Kyiv


[Russia] - Belarus Releases U.S. National Jailed Amid Opposition Crackdown


Russia’s Top Communist Demands Volgograd Be Renamed Stalingrad


Gazprom Returns to Profit in 2024 After Record Loss


[Russia] - Ukrainian Drone Strikes Kill 7 at Kherson Region Market, Kremlin-Installed Official Says


‘We Need to Recognize Russia’s Colonial Violence’: Buryat Illustrator Seseg Jigjitova


Russia Triples 2025 Budget Deficit Forecast to 1.7% of GDP


Moscow May Have Helped North Korea Develop Its New Warship, Seoul Claims


Russian Air Assault on Ukraine’s Odesa Leaves At Least 2 Dead


Ukraine and U.S. Sign Long-Awaited Minerals Deal


[Russia] - Russia Slams France's Accusations It Hacked Macron's Campaign


Kursk Governor Says 288 Civilians Were Killed During Ukraine's Incursion


[Russia] - McDonald's and Coca-Cola Rule Out Return to Russia


Ukraine, U.S. Sign Minerals Deal, Tying Trump to Kyiv


Russia Slams France's Accusations of Hacking Macron's Campaign


Russia Says 288 Civilians Died in Ukraine's Kursk Incursion


[Russia] - McDonald's, Coca-Cola Rule Out Return to Russia


[Russia] - Investigation Reveals Systematic Torture of Ukrainians in Russian Prisons


[Russia] - 'We Have Our Own Gestapo': A Russian Military Deserter Recalls His Time Inside a Secret Jail for Defectors


North Korea and Russia Begin Construction of First Road Bridge


Kremlin to Ukraine: Negotiate With Us, Not Washington


[Russia] - Nearly 1 in 4 Russian Billionaires Fled Country After Invasion of Ukraine-- Proekt


Interior Ministry Issues Arrest Warrant for TV Rain Chief Editor Tikhon Dzyadko


Russian Police Accuse Dubai-Based Instagram Influencer of Tax Evasion


Russia to Ramp Up Influence Efforts in Armenia Ahead of Parliamentary Elections – Vedomosti


India’s Modi to Skip Moscow Victory Day Parade Amid Tensions With Pakistan


Putin Renames Volgograd Airport ‘Stalingrad’ to Honor WWII Battle


Russian Strikes Kill At Least 1, Wound Dozens in Dnipro and Kharkiv Regions


Retail Giant Magnit to Buy Premium Supermarket Chain Azbuka Vkusa for $490M


Trump Flip-Flops on Putin’s Intentions for Peace in Ukraine


[Russia] - Rubio Warns U.S. Will End Mediation Unless It Sees 'Concrete Proposals' From Russia and Ukraine