Stara Krasnianka care house attack

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Stara Krasnianka care house attack
Part of the
Russian separatist forces in Donbas and Ukraine

On 11 March 2022, the attack to the care house in

pro-Russian separatist forces
attacked the care house with heavy weapons while 71 patients with disabilities and 15 members of staff were still inside. A fire broke out and approximately fifty people died.

Events

As reported by

OHCHR, on 7 March, Ukrainian soldiers took up positions inside the care house in the village of Stara Krasnianka [ru; uk], near Kreminna (Luhansk Oblast) and set up a firing base there without first evacuating residents and staff.[1]

In the preceding days, the Ukrainian armed forces had allegedly mined the surrounding area and blocked roads, which prevented the local authorities from evacuating the site, as requested by the management of the care home.

pro-Russian separatists without casualties among the civilian residents of the house. It is unclear which side was the first to open fire.[1] On March 11, dozens of elderly and disabled patients, some of them bedridden, were in the care house without water or electricity, along with the Ukrainian soldiers.[3][2][1]

On 11 March, pro-Russian separatist armed groups attacked the care house again and used heavy weapons while patients and staff were still inside.[1] The attack caused a fire that spread throughout the facility and killed the patients who could not move.[3][2] A group of residents fled the house, walked for 5 kilometres in the forest and was given assistance by pro-Russian separatists.[3] 22 patients survived the attack but as of 29 June the exact number of persons killed remains unknown.[1] On 20 March Serhiy Haidai, governor of Luhansk region, reported 56 victims.[4][5] At the time of the attack, 71 patients with disabilities and 15 staff were at the house.[1]

Aftermath

In the aftermath of the attack, the

Denisova stated that more than 50 elderly people in the care home had been deliberately fired upon by a tank, and called the attack a "crime against humanity" by "racist occupation forces".[6] Serhiy Haidai, governor of Luhansk region, reported 56 victims from the attack, which he called "cynical and deliberate".[4][5] He also said that 15 survivors had been kidnapped by the occupiers and taken to a geriatric hospital in Svatove, at the time under separatist control.[4] On 20 March Ukraine's prosecutor general announced war crimes charges against Russia for the attack on a medical facility,[4] and the US Embassy in Ukraine stated that Russia would bear responsibility for the crime.[7]

In the first half of April, a Russian Telegram channel published a video from the destroyed nursing home, which showed many burned bodies, ammunition and weapons among the ruins. The Washington Post "verified the location of the new video and some of the images by comparing them with multiple prewar archive videos and photographs of the nursing home".[5] According to The Washington Post, "Our Donbas, a campaign group allied with the LPR, previously published photographs and a video package that showed select areas of damage to the nursing home and stated that more than 60 people were killed there. The group’s video footage and images, which were also verified[citation needed] by The Post, did not show any bodies or weaponry."[5]

Ukraine’s prosecutor general reported preliminary findings that matched Haidai’s account; his office announced war crimes charges against Russia for the attack.[5] The area was under Russian control, and Ukrainian investigators had been unable to access the site.[5] On 29 June the OHCHR published a report on the situation of human rights in Ukraine disclosing more information on the attack.[1] According to the report, Ukraine’s armed forces bear a significant responsibility for what happened because "a few days before the March 11 attack, Ukrainian soldiers took up positions inside the nursing home, effectively making the building a target."[8][3][2]

See also

  • War crimes in the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

References