Russia says Kyiv’s forces killed 22 people in occupied village

Russia says Kyiv’s forces killed 22 people in occupied village
A Ukrainian serviceman patrols a street next to buildings in the town of Sudzha, Kursk region on Aug. 16, 2024. Ukraine controls dozens of border settlements in the Kursk region of western Russia. (Reuters)
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Updated 31 January 2025

Russia says Kyiv’s forces killed 22 people in occupied village

Russia says Kyiv’s forces killed 22 people in occupied village
  • Ukraine controls dozens of border settlements in the Kursk region of western Russia since launching a surprise offensive in August

MOSCOW: Moscow on Friday accused Ukrainian troops of killing 22 people in an occupied Russian village, including eight women who were allegedly raped before being executed.
Ukraine controls dozens of border settlements in the Kursk region of western Russia since launching a surprise offensive in August and says about 2,000 civilians still live in areas it occupies.
Russia has now retaken several towns.
Russia’s Investigative Committee had said on January 19 it was investigating the killing of “at least seven civilians” in the village of Russkoye Porechnoye, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the Ukrainian border.
On Friday, it said it was now investigating the killing of “22 residents” between September and November.
Among the victims, whose bodies were found in the basements of several homes, were eight women who were allegedly raped before being killed, the Investigative Committee said.
AFP was not immediately able to verify the claims and there has been no official response from Ukraine.
Russian investigators blame five Ukrainian soldiers for the killings and said one of them, Yevgeny Fabrisenko, was arrested during the fighting in the Kursk region.
The committee released a video of the interrogation of a man identified as Fabrisenko, who confessed.
At a briefing on Friday, Russia’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said: “First people were tortured, abused, then killed either by being shot or blown up.”
Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of killing civilians since the conflict began nearly three years ago.
Russian forces are accused of murdering hundreds of civilians in the town of Bucha, near Kyiv. AFP journalists are among the international media outlets that have seen and photographed the bodies of Ukrainian civilians killed, some with their hands tied.
Moscow has denied the allegations and accused Kyiv of staging the footage — a claim that has been rejected by several independent fact-checking organizations and media outlets, including AFP.


UN agencies warn of famine for millions, appeal for more funding

UN agencies warn of famine for millions, appeal for more funding
Updated 5 sec ago

UN agencies warn of famine for millions, appeal for more funding

UN agencies warn of famine for millions, appeal for more funding
ROME: Millions more people risk famine in at least a dozen crisis spots around the world, including Sudan and Gaza, two UN agencies warned on Wednesday, appealing for funds to address a shortfall amid global cuts to international aid.
In a joint report, the World Food Programme and the Food and Agriculture Organization also listed Haiti, Mali, South Sudan and Yemen as countries facing “an imminent risk of catastrophic hunger,” meaning famine.
It said the hunger situation in six more countries — Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Nigeria, Somalia and Syria — was considered to be of “very high concern.”
Against this backdrop, funding shortfalls for humanitarian aid “are crippling emergency responses, forcing deep ration cuts and reducing access to food for the most vulnerable groups with refugee food assistance at a breaking point,” the WFP and FAO said.
Calling for more help from governments and other donors, the WFP and FAO said that as of the end of October, only $10.5 billion had been received out of the estimated $29 billion needed to assist people most at risk.
“Famine prevention is not just a moral duty — it is a smart investment in long-term peace and stability,” said FAO Director-General QU Dongyu. “Peace is a prerequisite for food security and the right to food is a basic human right.”
The United States, top donor to both UN agencies last year, has slashed its foreign aid under President Donald Trump, and other major nations have also made or announced cuts in development and humanitarian assistance.