Tonight on Genocide in Ukraine we will continue our discussion about the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Genocide Convention, and the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab report on Russia’s Systematic Program of Coerced Adoption and Fostering of Ukraine’s Children.
Here's the link to the Space and resource thread from December 5, including the link to the Yale HRL report and the UN Security Council meeting on the topic.
The Declaration of the Rights of the Child was adopted by the UN in 1959. Convention on the Rights of the Child treaty was recognized in 1989 by most UN member states and entered into force Sept. 2, 1990. Russia is a party to it. ohchr.org/en/instruments…
The Declaration's 4 guiding principles: 1. Principle of non-discrimination; 2. Principle of right to life, survival, and development; 3. Principle of doing what is in the best interest of the child; 4. Principle of meaningfully engaging and respecting children's views.
unicef offers a child-friendly version of the Convention on the Rights of the Child here: unicef.org/child-rights-c…
Here is the Yale HRL's main page for the report on Russia’s Systematic Program of Coerced Adoption and Fostering of Ukraine’s Children, including a video interview, summary of key findings, and links to the full report: hub.conflictobservatory.org/portal/apps/si…
Yale HRL has previously reported on Russia's Systematic Program for the Re-education and Adoption of Ukraine's Children in February 2023 hub.conflictobservatory.org/portal/apps/si…
Yale HRL has previously reported on Belarus' Collaboration with Russia in the Systematic Deportation of Ukraine’s Children in November 2023 hub.conflictobservatory.org/portal/apps/si…
Here's our prior thread on Article II (e) of the Genocide Convention: Forcibly Transferring Children of the Group to Another Group:
Here's our December 15, 2023 thread on the Yale HRL report on Belarus' collaboration with russia on the systematic deportation of Ukraine's children. I recommend following its links to the December 8 (and its link to the December 1) resource thread, too.
More on 18-year-old Ukrainian orphan, Oleksandr Yakushchenko, who was relocated from the Kherson region to Russia, reportedly committed suicide while living with a foster family in Russian Krasnodar Krai
Gina discussed this important Kyiv Post interview with David Satter - The Truth About Russia: Putin’s Rise, Morality, and Global Propaganda kyivpost.com/videos/43641
Here's the thread from Sergej Sumlenny that we've discussed before - how russia primed its population for this invasion and promoted stalinism, nazism, and russia's amoral brutality
Tonight we are delighted to speak with Zarina Zabrisky, @ZarinaZabrisky , Director of "Kherson Human Safari", documenting russian war crimes in Kherson.
We discussed this topic earlier this month after the UN and Human Rights Watch reports were published. Zarina's been there since shortly after Kherson was liberated. Here's our thread from a few weeks ago on the topic:
And embedded in that thread is an extensive thread from @KanariFella which includes much of Zarina's work, which first quoted an inhabitant of Kherson, Tatiana, using the expression "human safari" in July 2024.
The additional information under the number of deported and or forcibly displaced children notes open source data obtained from the russian federation states it's 744 thousand children. childrenofwar.gov.ua/en/
In May, 183 civilians were killed in Ukraine due to full-scale Russian aggression. In May, civilian casualties were recorded in 17 oblasts of Ukraine and the city of Kyiv, including in areas far from the front line.
Tonight on Genocide in Ukraine, we will discuss the May 28, 2025 UN report on the russian systematic drone attacks targeting Ukrainian civilians in Kherson. 🧵
This has been reported for almost a year, but in the last week both the UN report and a Human Rights Watch report have been published on the topic. Here's the May 28 UN press release:
I and a dear friend just got our English-language copies of Victoria Amelina's @vamelina unfinished book this week. Her life was cut short in 2023 by a russian missile striking a city center in Kramatorsk, Ukraine on June 27, 2022. 🧵
I have been staring at the finished book in my hands for days now, so thankful for the strong women who have completed Vika's project, yet frozen when I tried to open it to read.
I read the forward last night but could not bring myself to read further to Vika's actual words. It's almost as if reading them is a final acceptance of her death, despite all of her words clearly telling me otherwise.
Tonight on Genocide in Ukraine we'll discuss the Holodomor and commemoration events this weekend. 91 years ago, russia tried to starve Ukraine into submission. They've tried it again in this war, too.
We discussed the Holodomor last year during its 90th commemoration. Extensive thread with great information shared by many participants: threadreaderapp.com/thread/1728215…
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