Russian ambassador accuses Ukraine of faking images of civilians suffering

Yuri Filatov says civilians in besieged city of Mariupol are being used as human shields

By Ronan McGreevy in The Irish Times

The Russian ambassador to Ireland Yuri Filatov has accused the Ukrainian government of using “infamous images and fakes about Mariupol”.

The city has been besieged by the Russian military since the beginning of March.

Independent observers say that large parts of the city have been levelled by Russian shelling and a major humanitarian crisis is apparent for 160,000 people who are trapped there without food, water, shelter or electricity.

Writing a blog on the Telegram website, Mr Filatov accused Ukrainian “neo-Nazis” of using civilians as human shields in the city. He also accused the western media of ignoring shelling of civilians in the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic, which is only recognised by Russia.

The ambassador alleged that images of 20 people being killed by a missile in Donetsk were faked and used in western media as evidence of Russian aggression against Ukrainian civilians.

Special military operation

Mr Filatov acknowledged that the “special military operation” has been a “dramatic, traumatic period for many Ukrainians”, but he said the suffering of the Russian speaking people in the east of Ukraine has been going on since 2014.

“It does not fit into the narrative, propagated in Europe, it is being suppressed in the media,” he wrote. “There are a lot of hard facts that need to be addressed to make a fair judgement of what has been going on in Ukraine.”

Mr Filatov alleged that the government which took over in Ukraine after the Maidan Revolution of 2014 was one composed of “Neo-Nazi and right-wing groups and parties”.

Ukrainian governments since then have cracked down on Russian language speakers and honoured Nazi collaborators during the Second World War, he stated.

He accused Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who is Jewish, of co-operating with neo-Nazis when he came to power in 2019.

Mr Filatov repeated the assertion made by Russian president Vladimir Putin that the Ukrainian government was planning an offensive operation for the breakaway Donbass region in March.

“In order to prevent the genocide and to deny the Kiev regime any ability to inflict any further suffering on the people of Donbass, the decision was made to start a special military operation in Ukraine,” Mr Filatov wrote.

The Ukrainian government, he went on to state, has been facilitated by the West which has closed its eyes “to its ultranationalist, radical nature, with the sole purpose of creating hostile and aggressive entity on the border of Russia”.

The ambassador urged Irish people to consider that the “people of Donbass also deserve better and a peaceful life now and in the future, while racism, neo-Nazism and hatred should be resolutely rejected”.

A handout photo from the Russian Ministry for Civil Defence shows a fire at an oil depot in the city of Belgorod, Russia on Friday. According to the Belgorod region’s governor, the fire was caused by a Ukrainian air strike. 

Meanwhile, Russia has accused Ukraine of sending attack helicopters across the border to strike an oil storage facility in what would be the first raid on Russian soil since the outbreak of the war if confirmed.

Ukraine has not confirmed that it launched the attack, raising questions about whether Russian negligence may be to blame. A Russian governor in the border region of Belgorod said that early on Friday two Ukrainian Mi-24 helicopters crossed the border at low altitude before firing rockets at an oil facility some 40km from the border.

InteractiveVideo posted to social media on Friday appeared to show a helicopter strike using air-to-ground missiles and then a major fire at the facility said to be in Belgorod, with flames reaching dozens of metres into the air.

Reports showed that the facility continued to burn until midday on Friday, with dozens of firefighters dispatched to battle the inferno. Other videos showed the helicopters, which are used by both Ukraine and Russia, flying in the region.

“The fire at the oil depot occurred as a result of an airstrike from two helicopters of the armed forces of Ukraine, which entered the territory of Russia at low altitude,” said governor Vyacheslav Gladkov.

2 comments

  1. They say the first casualty in war is the truth!

    Could that be true as we read our daily diet of news.

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