Menu
• War crimes
12 September 2022

We are Russian citizens and are ashamed of the actions committed in our country’s name.

Statement by Oleg Orlov, Sergei Davidis, Co-Director of the Memorial Centre for the Defence of Human Rights regarding Russia’s strikes on Ukrainian power stations

© Вячеслав Мавричев/Суспільне [харківська тец5]

Statement by Oleg Orlov, Sergei Davidis, Co-Director of the Memorial Centre for the Defence of Human Rights

On 11 September 2022, Russian missiles hit several major power stations in different Ukrainian oblasts.

Speaking on the state TV channel ‘Rossiya-1’, Dmitry Kiselyov, one of the main Kremlin propagandists, named the strikes, which had resulted in blackouts, cuts in water supplies and communications, and stopped trains, a response to the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ counter-offensive.  “It looks as if this is just the beginning,” he threatened.

It is the logic of terrorists that responds to military defeat through deliberate strikes on critical civilian infrastructure on which life in cities and villages is dependent.

We are Russian citizens and are ashamed of the actions committed in our country’s name.

Co-Directors of the Memorial Centre for the Defence of Human Rights

Oleg Orlov

Serge Davidis

share the information

Similar articles

• War crimes

EU follows Ukraine in holding Russians to account for illegal excavations in occupied Crimea

The sanctioning of individuals involved in Russian illegal excavations in occupied Crimea and plunder is belated, but welcome, as was the ruling in Poland opening the way for the extradition of Alexander Butyagin

• War crimes

26-year-old Ukrainian sentenced to 22 years for alleged ‘plan to kill’ a Russian occupation prison chief

Victoria Kotliar was just 24 when seized by the Russians and probably tortured or threatened into ‘confessing’ on video

• War crimes

Russian occupation court sentences 66-year-old doctor to 14 years for supporting Ukraine through war bonds

Larysa Bieliaieva would be 80 if she survived the 14-year sentence in the horrific conditions of Russian prisons,

• War crimes   • Human Rights Abuses in Russian-occupied Crimea

Terror unrelenting as Russian courts uphold 15-year sentences for ‘treason’ against an invader

Niyara Ermambetova was seized just days after her mother’s funeral, with her elderly father now left to look after her two children. It is not known when Oksana Invanchenko was abducted, but she has four children