Putin Dealt a Double Blow in Europe

Two international bodies have on the same day accused Russia of carrying out war crimes and human rights violations in Ukraine.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) pretrial Chamber said on Tuesday it had issued arrest warrants for former Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the Russian Army General Valery Gerasimov for "the war crime of directing attacks at civilian objects" in Ukraine.

On the same day, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Grand Chamber said Moscow had committed human rights violations in Crimea in the decade since the beginning of its illegal occupation of the peninsula in February 2014.

Meanwhile, a lawyer for an international human rights group whose report this month outlined how Putin's forces had employed starvation tactics during the siege of the southern city of Mariupol in 2022, told Newsweek that "food and objects indispensable to survival are being weaponized across the conflict" by Russia.

In its statement released Tuesday, ICC judges said there were grounds that the suspects were responsible for missile strikes carried out against the Ukrainian electric infrastructure "from at least 10 October 2022 until at least 9 March 2023."

Newsweek has contacted the Kremlin and the Russian defense ministry for comment on the decisions by both bodies. Russia's Security Council, which Shoigu now heads, called the ICC arrest warrants "hot air" since the court's jurisdiction did not cover Russia and "part of the West's hybrid war" against Russia.

The ICC report was damning in its criticism of Shoigu and Gerasimov, accusing them of causing incidental harm to civilians and damage to civilian objects and inhumane acts.

These are violations of the Rome Statute that established the court in the Hague that relies on its 124 members to arrest anyone under a warrant.

It is the latest war crimes accusation linked to Putin and his inner circle. In March, 2023, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Putin over the alleged abduction of children from Ukraine, a claim which Moscow has dismissed.

putin dealt a double blow in europe

A Russian sapper checks a ruined building in Mariupol, in Russian-controlled Ukraine, on April 19, 2024. Getty Images

Siege of Mariupol

This month, the group Global Rights Compliance (GRC) released a report which it said proved that Russian forces had starved Ukrainians in the southern city of Mariupol that lasted until May 22, 2024.

Drawing on satellite imagery, pictures, videos, public statements and digital data, the group concluded that Russian forces had targeted water, food and medical supplies in a deliberate tactic of starvation before they seized the port city.

It found that 450,000 civilians were targeted with all water, electricity and gas supply cut off. Ukrainians were forced to drink from puddles, radiator batteries, and melted snow, while food distribution points, medical facilities and humanitarian corridors were bombed.

"What is the most shocking is the findings showed the strategy Russian forces pursued in starving the civilian population as a means to accelerate the capitulation of Mariupol," said Naomi Prodeau, a lawyer on the GRC's starvation mobile justice team.

"Attacks on civilian populations, attacks on civilian objects, attacks on hospitals—some of those constitute attacks on objects indispensable to the survival of civilians," she told Newsweek.

She said that such tactics were employed in other sieges by pro-Russian forces prior to Mariupol, such as in Aleppo, where Moscow intervened in the Syrian civil war, "so there were prior instances of these tactics before Mariupol."

"There are strong indicators that Russian and pro-Russian forces employed similar siege tactics and starvation tactics in northeastern regions at approximately the same time as the siege of Mariupol," she said. "It demonstrates that this is a tactic that is regularly employed and deployed against Ukrainian civilians."

"Food and objects indispensable to survival are being weaponized across the conflict beyond siege tactics," she added.

The ECHR Grand Chamber said on Tuesday that since 2014 when Putin seized Crimea, Russia had committed human rights violations on the peninsula, including the ill-treatment of Ukrainian soldiers, persons of Ukrainian ethnic origin, journalists and members of the Turkic Crimean Tatar minority.

After its full scale invasion in 2022, Russia was expelled from the Council of Europe, of which the ECHR is part and its ruling was welcomed by the Ukrainian foreign ministry which called it a "crucial milestone."

Meanwhile, the GRC is taking its evidence to the ICC Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to build a larger war crimes case against Putin.

Prodeau said that similar to genocide, the crime of starvation requires a specific intent to attack objects indispensable to civilian survival, and specific intent to starve that population, "which is a higher bar."

"Under that standard, if Russian or pro-Russian forces knew that in the ordinary course of events, civilians would starve, that qualifies as intent," she said. "There has never been a prosecution for the war crime of starvation before international courts," she said, "it's an underappreciated crime and is hard to prove."

Start your unlimited Newsweek trial

OTHER NEWS

28 minutes ago

Delaware Supreme Court reverses ruling invalidating early voting and permanent absentee status laws

28 minutes ago

A Southwest flight took off from a closed runway, forcing workers to clear out

29 minutes ago

HOWZAT! Ben Stokes trains primary school children in cricket

29 minutes ago

'Rohit Sharma Ko Humein Batane Ki Zaroorat Nahi...': Inzamam-ul-Haq Responds After India Captain's 'Open Your Mind' Suggestion on Reverse Swing

29 minutes ago

Simone Biles seizes lead on Day 1 of US Olympic Trials ahead of Jordan Chiles and Sunisa Lee despite wobbly fifth-place performance on balance beam

29 minutes ago

Alec Baldwin’s case on track for trial in July as judge denies request to dismiss

32 minutes ago

Why short bursts of activity or ‘exercise snacks’ could help you reduce the health risks of sitting down all day

34 minutes ago

29 deaths at Launceston General Hospital to be investigated by Tasmanian coroner after senior staff misconduct

34 minutes ago

'Beautiful' home in fishing village hiding a very unique garden

37 minutes ago

Hall of Famer Orlando Cepeda dies at 86

40 minutes ago

‘He should be banned!’ - Torres amazed by Yamal

40 minutes ago

Mamelodi Sundowns go back to Europe! New destination revealed

40 minutes ago

Sha’Carri Richardson takes the spotlight with a stunning 200-metre finish in the US trials

40 minutes ago

Watchful AI saves India's endangered wild elephants from speeding trains

40 minutes ago

0629 Today in History

40 minutes ago

Ukrainians held prisoner for years in Russia return to Kyiv

40 minutes ago

Soccer-Vinicius unleashed boosts nervy Brazil to much-needed win

40 minutes ago

Holloway wins 110 metres hurdles in sizzling US Olympic trials

43 minutes ago

Video: Now even the New York Times turns on Biden: Democrat-friendly newspaper urges President to quit the race for the White House after disastrous debate - as party donors and congressmen give him a week to 'prove he is not dead'

44 minutes ago

Travis Kelce said WHAT to Taylor Swift during Eras Tour collaboration at Wembley? Instagram lipreader shares dialogue between Chiefs star and his girlfriend

45 minutes ago

Top 10 tips for healthy Chinese cooking

45 minutes ago

Henry Cavill’s The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare will be available to stream in Australia soon

45 minutes ago

NFC East news: Jalen Hurts stepping up to lead, Austin Ekeler wants heavy workload

45 minutes ago

Notre Dame 2025 Recruiting Class Ranks No. 4 By ESPN

45 minutes ago

Donald Trump accused of 'cheating at the highest level' after golf handicap thrown into doubt

45 minutes ago

Waveney Valley ought to be a Tory heartland. Could angry voters turn it Green?

45 minutes ago

Trust me, a white skirt is about to be the hardest working staple in your summer wardrobe

45 minutes ago

Dua Lipa Glastonbury set hit with sound issues - including during duet with surprise guest star

45 minutes ago

Queensland Police charge man for alleged DV stabbing murder of woman

48 minutes ago

Lakers News: Dejounte Murray Takes To Social Media After Lakers Draft Bronny James

49 minutes ago

Detroit Red Wings Stanley Cup champion Marty Pavelich dies at age 96

49 minutes ago

Book Box: New spins on Greek myths

49 minutes ago

Fatal fire at lithium battery plant in South Korea exposes 5-year oversight lapse

49 minutes ago

“I’m Doing This Movie.” The Wildest Erotic Thriller of the ‘90s Defied Hollywood at Every Turn

49 minutes ago

As BJP drags them into Emergency spotlight, INDIA allies say matter ‘past’, no need for Cong apology

49 minutes ago

Soto, Torres hit HRs, Judge drives in 2 as the Yankees rout Blue Jays 16-5 to halt 4-game skid

49 minutes ago

Exclusive Funko Pop of Eagles' Jalen Hurts Now Available

49 minutes ago

Tributes pour in for youngest son of former MEP Mick Wallace after death

49 minutes ago

Proteas ready to cement legendary status in Barbados

49 minutes ago

Worried your irons aren't spinning enough? Think again