Andriivka is a small village of just 1500 people. This is what it looked like after the Russian military spent a month occupying it.
@istories_media reporter Ekaterina Fomina travelled there to document Russian crimes — there were 13 dead civilians, and over 40 still missing.
This lady, Tatiana Udod, and her husband, were searched several times by Russian soldiers.
The Russians stole the couple's old Lada and used it to tear around the village. They also stole this cell phone. This becomes important...
...because that phone was later found elsewhere in the village. When Tatiana and her husband got it back, they found 25 photos a group of 4 Russian soldiers had taken of themselves.
@istories_media identified all four, shown here matched with social media posts.
Remarkably, Fomina called the soldier on the left, Daniil Frolkin — and he answered. He talked to her about his experience for a while. Then he called back, smoking a cigarette. He had a confession to make.
This is what he said.
He confessed to killing one civilian in Andriivka, saying he did it out of revenge because the man was acting a as spotter for Ukrainian artillery.
“I tell him to walk forward. He walks forward. I tell him, ‘On your knees.’ And I just shoot him in the head.”
This is Ruslan Yaremchuk, almost certainly the man Frolkin killed. 47 years old. He had four children, loved photography and videography.
“He just filmed everything he saw,” says his daughter Yaroslava. “We assume that’s why they shot him."
In his interview, the Russian soldier went on to denounce his commanders — who he said "don’t consider ordinary soldiers to be people."
Frolkin says he decided to confess for the sake of "his lads." He wanted his commanders punished.
He said his brigade was down to just 50 men, who are now being thrown into battle in Kherson. "They physically can’t stand it anymore," he said. "Our brigade is being destroyed."
But the story isn't just about him, or the other soldier reporters spoke with. It's about their victims.
One man was killed next to his friend. His mother wasn't allowed near his body in case it was mined.
“I went there every day anyway,” she says. “I took water from the house and washed them. There are tanks driving past, equipment, dust was getting on them. I thought no one would wash them.”
This story is by @istories_media, our Russian partners. They've been exiled from their country, but they continue their groundbreaking reporting. They're obsessed with getting this information to their countrymen.
Just watched a very uncomfortable exchange on @tvrain. The anchor, Anna Mongait, was interviewing Sergei Leschenko, a former Ukrainian legislator and now an advisor to Zelensky's office.
It was a polite interview, but at the end something happened that made my hair stand on end.
The last topic was an upcoming Russian show trial of captured Azov prisoners.
As her last question, trying to wrap up, Mongait asked whether Leschenko would watch it.
A transcript of their exchange:
"L: I’ll find some other shows. We have very interesting Telegram channels that show burning Russian tanks, APCs, shot-down planes. I get more pleasure watching that.
M: Well... we’ll hope that in some not-too-distant future, neither kind of show will give anyone any pleasure."
One of my favorite Russian poets and singer-songwriters, Veronika Dolina, just published a moving poem about how strange and alien her beloved Moscow feels, given what Russia is doing.
Normally I'd share it, but I've sort of hit my limit with wistful Russian liberal sadness.
She's made it clear from the beginning that she's devastated by the war, so it's not really about her. And no matter what happens, I'll always love the Russian language and all the great and humane things that have been written and composed in it. But...
The only emotion I feel comfortable expressing — the only one I feel is appropriate to express — is rage.
There will be time for elegiac tears later. But imagine some poet walking around Berlin in 1942 sighing about how this isn't his beloved Germany anymore.
I just spoke with a senior employee from Amnesty International.
Their sum-up: “It’s a dark moment for the movement, there’s no other way to put it.”
Also: "We threw a party the Russian state was eager to attend for its own political purposes.”
More in this (long) thread 👇
If you’re just joining us, at issue is this report just issued by @amnesty that criticizes the Ukrainian military for basing themselves in civilian areas. It’s been met with a firestorm of criticism from Ukrainians and specialists in the law of war.
Amnesty's Ukrainian chapter has disavowed the report, saying they did everything they could to prevent its publication. Their head, @OPokalchuk, has just resigned. The Ukrainian gov't has also witheringly criticized the report — here's a good summary. theguardian.com/world/2022/aug…
There's been lots of smart, strong criticism of @amnesty's Ukraine report by specialists in the laws of war (I'll link below) — not to mention their own colleagues on the ground — so I don't want to defend the report itself.
But I think it's worth pointing out a few things:
a) It's not correct to accuse Amnesty of only going after Ukraine while leaving Russia alone. They've published dozens of items on Russian atrocities. amnesty.org/en/latest/news…
b) A lot of the vitriol against Amnesty has the tone of "HOW DARE YOU CRITICIZE UKRAINE WHEN RUSSIA IS THE ONE ATTACKING." But surely it can't work this way — it can't be *completely impermissible* to point to alleged violations committed by a defending force.
I did a quick and dirty translation of the hyper-nationalistic screed that was posted by Dmitry Medvedev's VK account a few hours ago, and then quickly removed.
His spokesman says the account was hacked, and that he didn't write it.
That doesn't sound very plausible to me. Russian social networks are all joking that it was a drunk post. But who knows? If it wasn't a hack, it's hard to understand what the point was. A signal to hardline nationalists?
A 'cry of the soul' that was regretted as having gone too far? Or was ordered taken down? Who knows what's going on anymore.
My translation is in the rest of the thread. I did it real quick, so apologies for any errors. It's quite poorly written so I did a bit of cleanup. 👇
Alesya Marakhovskaya, a really great Russian journalist who has left the country, just wrote an impassioned Facebook post about how the war is tearing apart her family.
With her permission, I'm translating into English in this thread. People should see what this looks like. 👇
I recently fought with my close relatives. It began with all the classics about the war. They used words straight out of the darkest depths of propaganda:
- 'They have fascist marches.'
- 'Why is NATO at our borders?'
- 'We gave them their country.'
- 'They write about ‘ancient Ukrainians’ in their textbooks, how do you like that?'
- 'In a store in Ukraine I was told to fuck off for being Russian, so we should fucking bomb them.'