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Videos showing potential Russian war crimes flood social media, 'overwhelming' h...

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Videos showing potential Russian war crimes flood social media, 'overwhelming' human rights experts rushing to document them

Connor Perrett
Sat, March 12, 2022, 11:00 PM·7 min read
Explosion in Mariupol, Ukraine
An explosion is seen in an apartment building after Russian's army tank fires in Mariupol, Ukraine, Friday, March 11, 2022.AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka
  • Videos that appear to show war crimes in Russia's war against Ukraine litter social media.

  • Human Rights researchers are analyzing and cataloging these videos in real-time.

  • The videos could one day be used in international criminal cases against Russians.

The camera moves rapidly. Sounds of artillery echo in the distance. A pile of mangled metal and rubber burns. Injured people are carried away from the large building, some on stretchers and some on the backs of others.

The video, posted and shared across social media early Wednesday, was one of several that showed the aftermath of what Ukrainian officials said was the Russian military's bombing of a children's and maternity hospital in southern Ukraine.

Another video posted to Telegram on Wednesday, and verified by The New York Times, showed the inside of the hospital. It similarly was littered with debris from broken windows, fallen ceilings, and damaged walls. A person says that there is blood everywhere.

Over the last several weeks, videos from inside Ukraine have spread across social media platforms, giving viewers across the globe a front-row seat to the atrocities of Russia's unprovoked attack on Ukraine. The onslaught of videos and images from the conflict has also provided researchers and human rights groups access to a trove of potential evidence as they seek to document atrocities and war crimes.

"We do reconstructions of scenes to really understand how that evidence plays out," said Milena Marin, the senior advisor at Amnesty International's Citizen Evidence Lab. "We combine all that with the testimonies to have a complete picture as much as possible."

The content comes from a variety of sources: often journalists or citizens on the ground who feel it's their "mission" to show what's happening to their cities, Marin said.

On TikTok, Ukrainians have posted videos showing the aftermath of nights of shelling and other attacks, showing holes bored into the sides of buildings and debris littering streets. A chilling video captured Sunday by a freelance journalist in Irpin, Ukraine, appeared to show the moment a Russian mortar strike killed a Ukrainian family trying to escape violence.


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