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An elderly woman cries near her house in Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, on April 2. The town's mayor said 280 people had been buried in a mass grave and that the town was littered with corpses.
An elderly woman cries near her house in Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, on April 2. The town's mayor said 280 people had been buried in a mass grave and that the town was littered with corpses.

A UN report has found that Russian forces were responsible for the "vast majority" of human rights violations, including war crimes, in four regions of Ukraine during the early weeks of the war.

The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine documented events in Ukraine's northern Kyiv, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, and Sumy regions in late February and March 2022.

The commission's report on October 18 found that Russian forces indiscriminately shelled areas they were trying to capture and attacked civilians trying to flee.

The commission "found reasonable grounds to conclude that an array of war crimes, violations of human rights and international humanitarian law have been committed in Ukraine,” the UN Human Rights Council said in a news release.

"The impact of these violations on the civilian population in Ukraine is immense. The loss of lives is in the thousands. The destruction of infrastructure is devastating," commission Chairman Erik Mose said in the news release.

The European Union and human rights organizations have already accused Russian forces of committing human rights violations in Bucha, a town northeast of Kyiv, in early March.

Ukrainian forces that recaptured Bucha and other areas near Kyiv found scores of bodies in the streets and mass burial sites of people killed under Russian occupation.

Bodies Discovered Of Victims Bound, Shot In Mass Grave Near Kyiv
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According to the commission's findings, family members who lost loved ones have expressed a strong desire for justice to be served. A man whose stepson was killed in Bucha, for example, told the commission he wants the guilty parties to be put on trial so that the truth comes out.

The commission documented patterns of summary executions, unlawful confinement, torture, ill-treatment, rape, and other sexual violence committed in areas occupied by Russian troops across the four regions covered by the report, the Human Rights Council said.

The four regions have been recaptured by Ukraine since the time period covered in the report.

While Russian armed forces were responsible for "the vast majority of the violations identified, Ukrainian forces have also committed international humanitarian law violations in some cases, including two incidents that qualify as war crimes," the Human Rights Council said.

Kyiv has said it will punish abuses committed by its own forces but believes the number of such incidents is small.

Moscow denies deliberately targeting civilians despite ample evidence that it has indiscriminately bombarded villages, towns, and cities, killing scores of people.

With reporting by Reuters
Asra Panahi reportedly died in a hospital on October 14.
Asra Panahi reportedly died in a hospital on October 14.

A 16-year-old girl beaten by security forces in the northwestern Iranian city of Ardabil for refusing to sing a pro-regime anthem when her school was raided by agents has died of her injuries.

The Coordinating Council of Teachers Syndicates in Iran confirmed in a post on its Telegram channel that Asra Panahi died following a raid by security forces on a girls' high school in Ardabil on October 13.

According to the council, Ardabil city officials took students from the Shahed high school to a pro-government demonstration and asked them to sing an anthem that praises Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

After the pupils resisted, the security forces attacked the students and beat many of them. Ten were taken to an unknown location while seven others were injured. Panahi reportedly died in a hospital on October 14.

Iranian officials have denied security forces beat the students.

Iran has been roiled in unrest -- one of the deepest challenges to the Islamic regime since the revolution in 1979 -- since the September 16 death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in police custody for allegedly wearing a hijab, or head scarf, improperly.

The government has held several counter-rallies to try and quell the dissent but to little effect, as people continue to take to the streets across the country. They also launched a series of raids on schools across the country, violently arresting students, especially female students.

Protesters in Ardabil have continued to take to the streets despite the threat of a further crackdown by security forces, with videos posted on social media showing people in the streets chanting "Freedom, freedom" and also "Death to the dictator," a reference to Khamenei.

Former Iranian soccer star Ali Daei has challenged Iranian lawmakers to tell the truth about what is happening in the country and to be accountable after Kazem Musavi, the representative of Ardabil in parliament, denied Panahi's death was due to being beaten, saying in an interview with the DidbanIran news site that she committed suicide.

"History has proven who the liars are," said Daei, a former forward with German soccer giants Bayern Munich and the former Iran team captain.

Iran's Children's Rights Protection Society says that at least 28 children have been killed in the crackdown, including many from the underprivileged provinces of Sistan-Baluchistan and Kurdistan.

The Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights says that at least 215 people have been killed in the crackdown, which the European Union condemned on October 17 while imposing new sanctions on Iran's information minister, the country's "morality police," and other senior officials.

Written by Ardeshir Tayebi based on an original story in Persian by RFE/RL's Radio Farda

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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