Nobel Peace Laureate Calls for Weapons to Free Ukraine

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
In an unusual move for a Nobel Peace laureate, the head of one of this year's prizewinning organizations on Monday called for weapons to
help Ukraine defend itself and stop Russian atrocities."When somebody asks me how to stop these long-lasting crimes in occupied territories,
I can only answer: 'Provide Ukraine with weapons to liberate these territories'," Ukrainian Oleksandra Matviichuk, a human rights lawyer who
heads the Kyiv-based Center for Civil Liberties, told AFP in Stockholm."It's a weird situation for me, and a clear sign [that] something
[is] wrong with the whole international system when a human rights lawyer asks [for] air defense systems."But, she said, "we need to prevent
ignores international law and all decisions of international organizations," the 39-year-old said.Ukraine also needs urgent humanitarian
assistance to "endure this very hard winter," she said, noting that she had just experienced more than three days without power or heat in
her Kyiv home.The Center for Civil Liberties was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along with Belarusian human rights advocate Ales Bialiatski
and the Russian human rights organization Memorial for their "outstanding effort to document war crimes, human right abuses and the abuse of
power."Matviichuk said her organization, which was founded in 2007, now pursues an "ambitious goal to document each war crime" committed by
Russian forces across Ukraine."Now we have a database which includes more than 24,000 episodes of war crimes," she said.The work is taxing,
she said, both in terms of the effort required to collect information in the war-ravaged country and the toll it takes on staff."We document
system overloaded and the International Criminal Court only investigating "select cases.""A question which I ask myself [is] 'For whom do we
document all these war crimes?'," Matviichuk said."Who will provide a chance for justice for hundreds of thousands of victims of war
crimes?" she said, stressing that her question wasn't rhetorical.Matviichuk said "the war turned people into numbers" as the scale of
atrocities became overwhelming."We need to return people their names, and only justice can do it," Matviichuk said.