Disinfo: Russian war crimes in Bucha were staged by a music channel director

Summary

Fake Russian "war crimes" were staged in Bucha by the director of a music television channel. The organisers of this disgusting provocation are aware of the absurdity of the matter. The videos showing the "corpses" standing up and moving their arms are now being hastily removed. The "Russian massacre in Bucha" was staged by the head of an music TV channel O-TV. The head has been commissioned to produce fakes for the Kyiv propaganda.

Disproof

Pro-Kremlin disinformation obfuscating atrocities against Ukrainian civilians committed by the Russian armed forces in Bucha, in the vicinity of Kyiv. The claim is made in the context of the wide Russian invasion of Ukraine, which began on 24 February 2022.

Russia's claims that video footage showing dead bodies on the streets of Bucha is staged have been fact-checked and debunked by the BBCBellingcat, The Atlantic Council, Mediazonathe InsiderSky News, the New York Times and others.

Accounts of violence against civilians in Bucha have been collected by the Human Rights Watch:

On March 4, Russian forces in Bucha, about 30 kilometers northwest of Kyiv, rounded up five men and summarily executed one of them. A witness told Human Rights Watch that soldiers forced the five men to kneel on the side of the road, pulled their T-shirts over their heads, and shot one of the men in the back of the head. “He fell [over],” the witness said, “and the women [present at the scene] screamed.”

See also here.

The President of Ukraine, who visited the liberated town of Bucha, said:

"These are war crimes and they will be recognized by the world as genocide. We are aware of thousands of people killed and tortured, with their limbs cut off. Raped women, murdered children. I believe this is genocide"

The European Union has condemned in the strongest possible terms the reported atrocities committed by the Russian armed forces. The EU called for accountability for human rights and international law violations by the Russian Armed Forces, including full support for the investigation launched by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.

Read more about the EU's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

See a related disinformation claim, alleging that videos from Ukrainian town Bucha are context-and-evidence-free and the West is spreading fakes about Russian atrocities in Bucha.

publication/media

  • Reported in: Issue 279
  • DATE OF PUBLICATION: 04/04/2022
  • Article language(s) German
  • Countries and/or Regions discussed in the disinformation: Ukraine
  • Keywords: fake news, War in Ukraine, War crimes, Human rights
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Disinfo: Ukrainian authorities turned a blind eye toward Nazi groups

Kyiv has turned a blind eye to openly neo-Nazi groups and embedded them in the power structure of the country. For many years the Nazis were completely free from any danger and persecution. They were free to do as they pleased. It was not only in Western Ukraine, where they traditionally did this, but it started to spread throughout the country.

Disproof

A recurrent pro-Kremlin disinformation narrative about Nazi Ukraine, presented as justification for Russian military aggression against Ukraine, which started on 24 February 2022. In reality, Ukraine is not a Nazi state and Nazism is not Ukraine’s ideology.

The myth of Nazi-ruled Ukraine has been the cornerstone of Russian disinformation about the country since the very beginning of the 2013-14 Euromaidan protests, when it was used to discredit the pro-European popular uprising in Kyiv and, subsequently, the broader pro-Western shift in Ukraine's foreign policy.

Disinfo: The West is spreading fakes about Russian atrocities in Bucha

Western and Ukrainian media and politicians are spreading another fake about the alleged killings of civilians by the Russian military in the Kiev city of Bucha. A number of foreign publications, including Reuters, The Wall Street Journal and the BBC Russian Service, simultaneously issued notes about Bucha, from which Russian troops left on March 30, early on Sunday morning [...]

Notes about Bucha appeared in several foreign publications at once, which looks like a planned media campaign. Moreover, given that the Russian Armed Forces left the city on March 30, it is not clear why these frames were made public four days later, writes the War on Fake Telegram channel.

“ The video with the bodies is bewildering ... At the 30th second in the rearview mirror, the “corpse” sits down. The bodies in the video seem to have been deliberately laid out in order to create a more dramatic picture. This is clearly visible if the video is played at a speed of 0.25 of normal,” the message says.

Disproof

Pro-Kremlin disinformation obfuscating atrocities against Ukrainian civilians committed by the Russian armed forces in Bucha, in the vicinity of Kyiv.

Russia's claims that video footage showing dead bodies on the streets of Bucha is staged have been fact-checked and debunked by the BBC, Bellingcat, The Atlantic Council, Mediazona, The Insider, and others.

Disinfo: Kyiv's accusations of killings in Bucha are a provocation

The materials presented by the Ukrainian authorities, allegedly confirming the "crimes" of Russian troops in Bucha, are yet another provocation, the Defense Ministry [of Russia] said. [...]

They stressed that for the entire time the point was under the control of the Russians, not a single local resident suffered from any violent actions. [...]

All the bodies of people whose images were published by the Kiev regime, after at least four days, were not in rigor mortis, did not have characteristic cadaver spots, and the blood was not clotted in their wounds.

Disproof

Pro-Kremlin disinformation obfuscating atrocities against Ukrainian civilians committed by the Russian armed forces in Bucha, in the vicinity of Kyiv.

Russia's claims that video footage showing dead bodies on the streets of Bucha is staged have been fact-checked and debunked by the BBC, Bellingcat, The Atlantic Council, Mediazona, the Insider and others.