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ConflictsUkraine

Germany heard Russian troop calls on atrocities in Ukraine

April 7, 2022

German intelligence has reportedly intercepted messages by Russian troops discussing murders in the Ukrainian town. Citing the report, and other atrocities, two German ex-ministers are seeking a war crimes probe.

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Bodies in black bags outside the cemetery in Bucha
Ukrainian authorities are working to identify hundreds of bodies they say were found in Bucha and other townsImage: Rodrigo Abd/AP/dpa/picture alliance

The German foreign intelligence agency BND intercepted radio messages from Russian military sources discussing the murders of civilians in the Ukrainian town of Bucha, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Thursday.

Images of bodies lying on the road in Bucha have shocked the world. The small town, 37 kilometers (23 miles) northwest of Kyiv, was occupied by Russian troops for more than a month since they invaded Ukraine on February 24.

According to local officials, more than 300 people were killed by Russian forces in Bucha, including 50 who were executed. 

Russia has denied committing atrocities in Bucha, claiming without evidence that they were "staged" by Ukraine. Several groups have rebutted the Russian claims.

Fact-check: What really happened in Bucha?

What did the report say? 

The BND findings are believed to include radio transmissions that match the locations of bodies found along the main road, according to the magazine's report.

Der Spiegel said that in one intercept, a soldier allegedly described to his colleagues shooting someone off their bicycle. A body was photographed lying next to a bicycle.

The report said there were additional sound recordings, the physical origin of which was harder to pinpoint, suggesting similar events had taken place in other Ukrainian cities.

The BND presented its findings in parliament on Wednesday, Der Spiegel reported, without giving a source for the information.

Satellite images point to atrocities

Reuters news agency reported, citing an unnamed security source, that the German government has "indications" that Russia was involved in killing civilians in Bucha. "However, these findings on Bucha refer to satellite images. The radio transmissions cannot be clearly assigned to Bucha," the source told Reuters. 

On Wednesday, German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit said an analysis of noncommercial satellite images showed victims in Bucha had been lying on a road since at least March 10.

"Credible evidence shows that Russian armed and security forces were deployed in the area from March 7 up to and including March 30. They were also engaged in interrogation of prisoners who were subsequently executed. These are the findings we have," Hebestreit said.

"The statements made by the Russian side that these were staged scenes and that they were not responsible for the killings, are thus not tenable in our view."

German former ministers seeking war crimes probe

German former Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger and former Interior Minister Gerhart Baum on Thursday filed a 140-page criminal complaint with German prosecutors over Russia's invasion of Ukraine

The two former ministers are seeking the opening of a war crimes probe against Russian officials, including President Vladimir Putin, as well as "a whole series of members of the Russian military," according to their lawyer.

The lawyer representing them, Nikolaos Gazeas, cited Thursday's report by Der Spiegel. He said German prosecutors could use information obtained by intelligence agencies in deciding whether to launch a case. 

The crimes detailed in the complaint also include the attack on a nuclear power plant and the bombing of a maternity hospital in the besieged city of Mariupol, Gazeas said. 

Prosecutors at the International Criminal Court have launched an investigation into possible war crimes in Ukraine. 

Gazeas said parallel investigations in multiple jurisdictions could be mutually reinforcing. "The law is a weapon in this situation,'' said former Interior Minister Baum, "and we want to use it."

fb/sms (AFP, AP, Reuters)