A long nightmare of repression awaits Ukraine’s occupied lands - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 乌克兰战争

A long nightmare of repression awaits Ukraine’s occupied lands

Any ceasefire that leaves Putin with his conquests will bring more Russification and denial of civil liberties

A few weeks ago, Russian authorities returned to Ukraine the body of Yevhen Matveyev, mayor of Dniprorudne, a Russian-occupied town. He was captured after President Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The Russians offered no explanation of Matveyev’s death. In September, Viktoria Roshchyna, a Ukrainian journalist who bravely reported on conditions in Russian-held areas, died in captivity. She was 27.

The longer Putin’s war of aggression has gone on, the less often such stories make the headlines. We hear a lot about Russian military advances in eastern Ukraine, less about what is happening to people in the occupied areas. But if, as seems possible, Ukraine agrees to a ceasefire next year on the west’s advice, it is as certain as night follows day that ruthless repression and Russification will continue in the roughly 20 per cent of Ukrainian territory expected to remain in Russian hands.

A growing war weariness in Ukraine and the desire of some western governments to end the fighting may enable Putin to retain de facto, though not legal, control of his conquests. But if so, the west will need a strong stomach for what will come next. To judge from Russia’s actions over the past three years — and longer in the case of Crimea, annexed in 2014 — the occupied areas will suffer a fate like that of western Ukraine and the Baltic states, seized by Joseph Stalin in the second world war and incorporated into the USSR.

Accurate information about occupied Ukraine right now is difficult but not impossible to come by. One authoritative source is the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. In October, Mariana Katzarova, the office’s special rapporteur for Russia, said: “Hundreds of Ukrainian detainees, including civilians and prisoners of war, are being forcibly transferred within Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine or deported to the Russian Federation, where they are held incommunicado and tortured for information or as punishment.”

There are credible reports of war crimes and human rights violations from Ukrainian non-governmental organisations and investigative media. Very occasionally, grim news emerges from Russia itself. In November, a military court in Rostov-on-Don sentenced two Russian soldiers to life in prison for killing a Ukrainian family of nine, including two children, in the occupied town of Volnovakha. The soldiers’ motives fell into the category of “political, ideological, racial, national or religious hatred”.

Another well-documented crime is the forcible abduction to Russia of Ukrainian children. Putin signed a decree putting these children on a fast track to Russian citizenship. The abductions prompted the International Criminal Court to issue an arrest warrant for him and for Maria Lvova-Belova, Russia’s misleadingly named commissioner for children’s rights. According to the Ukrainian website Children of War, almost 20,000 children have been deported or forcibly displaced.

The state-sanctioned removal of children points to a central aim of Russian policy in the occupied areas — the systematic eradication of Ukrainian identity. One route to this goal is to seize people’s homes and make it impossible for them to regain them unless they acquire Russian passports. Another is to declare homes ownerless and move Russian settlers into them. A third is to Russify the education system and use Roskomnadzor, Russia’s internet censor, to block independent Ukrainian websites.

Few occupied areas have been more rigorously Russified than Crimea. And of the people there, few have been treated more mercilessly than the Crimean Tatar minority. Some 250,000 lived in Crimea at the start of the century, but about 20,000 left the peninsula for mainland Ukraine after the 2014 annexation. Another 10,000 went abroad after the 2022 invasion to avoid conscription into Russia’s armed forces. In a newly published book about the Crimean Tatars, the British scholar Donald Rayfield describes Russia’s actions since 2014 as “the last stage of an ethnic genocide”.

It is the last stage because, in 1944, Stalin deported the entire Crimean Tatar population from its homeland (many returned in the 1980s and 1990s). Tens of thousands died en route to central Asia and Siberia. Similar horrors were inflicted on Poles, Balts and other minorities.

Memories of these crimes explain why many central and eastern Europeans, including Ukrainians, abhor the idea of leaving Putin in control of areas seized since 2022. They know what Russia has done in the past, what it is doing now and what it will do in the future. A ceasefire seems on the horizon — but if it happens, the aftermath will rest on our consciences for much longer.

tony.barber@ft.com

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

Lex专栏:保险公司无法与自动驾驶汽车共享前途

如果自动驾驶汽车得到广泛应用,司机不再对事故负责,责任将转移到制造商身上,传统保险的作用将仅限于盗窃和与驾驶无关的损失。

英国大学核心理科课程减少,引发对产业战略的担忧

在过去5年中,化学课程减少了四分之一,生物科学课程减少了15%。

英伟达2024年在人工智能领域投资10亿美元

该集团成为寻求从其芯片驱动的技术革命中获益的初创企业的关键投资者。

比利时禁售一次性电子烟

专家称打击一次性产品对不断增长的电子烟行业影响有限 。

俄罗斯天然气停止流经乌克兰

经由乌克兰向欧洲输送天然气的过境协议到期,且没有后续协议。

基尔•斯塔默承诺2025年将是英国的“重建”之年

斯塔默重申了他的中心目标,即新建150万套住房、建立更安全的能源系统、改善学前教育支持、缩短医疗等候名单、减少移民和解决社区中的反社会行为。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×