Kyiv (Ukraine), 04/04/2022.- A handout photo made available by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Service shows Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (C) walking by a street with damaged Russian machinery in the recaptured by the Ukrainian army Bucha city of Kyiv (Kiev) area, Ukraine, 04 April 2022. On 24 February, Russian troops had entered Ukrainian territory in what the Russian president declared a 'special military operation', resulting in fighting and destruction in the country, a huge flow of refugees, and multiple sanctions against Russia. (Rusia, Ucrania) EFE/EPA/UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SERVICE HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES
Kyiv (Ukraine), 04/04/2022.- A handout photo made available by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Service shows Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (C) walking by a street with damaged Russian machinery in the recaptured by the Ukrainian army Bucha city of Kyiv (Kiev) area, Ukraine, 04 April 2022. On 24 February, Russian troops had entered Ukrainian territory in what the Russian president declared a 'special military operation', resulting in fighting and destruction in the country, a huge flow of refugees, and multiple sanctions against Russia. (Rusia, Ucrania) EFE/EPA/UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SERVICE HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES
Luego de que las autoridades ucranianas revelaron el hallazgo de más de 400 cadáveres de civiles, un coro ha resonado en los niveles más altos del poder político de Occidente, pidiendo rendición de cuentas, acciones judiciales y castigo. El lunes, el presidente ucraniano Volodymyr Zelenskyy dijo que estas muertes eran “genocidio” y “crímenes de guerra”, y el mandatario estadounidense Joe Biden señaló que su homólogo ruso Vladimir Putin es “un criminal de guerra” que debería ser enjuiciado.
Autor: EFE, publicada el 04 de abril de 2022