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News / Nation & World

Ukraine POWs dig comrades’ bodies from rubble

Soldiers died battling separatists for key airport

The Columbian
Published: February 26, 2015, 12:00am
2 Photos
Vladimir Kononov, defense minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, looks on as Ukrainian prisoners of war clear rubble Wednesday in a destroyed building of the airport outside Donetsk, Ukraine.
Vladimir Kononov, defense minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, looks on as Ukrainian prisoners of war clear rubble Wednesday in a destroyed building of the airport outside Donetsk, Ukraine. Photo Gallery

DONETSK, Ukraine — Ukrainian POWs in the separatist stronghold of Donetsk began a task Wednesday that strained their hearts as well as their muscles: digging through the rubble to retrieve the bodies of fellow soldiers killed last month in the bitter battle for the city’s airport.

Associated Press journalists saw at least four bodies being carried out of the once-glittering, now-obliterated Donetsk airport terminal. A Ukrainian official said seven in all were retrieved. Rebel representatives said many more soldiers were still buried under the collapsed building, but provided no figures.

One captive soldier saw two friends being pulled out of the rubble, as the facility’s twisted steel beams and smashed cement walls were being sawn into pieces and towed away.

“I recognized them from their clothing. They were my friends,” said the man, a member of the Ukrainian army’s 90th brigade who identified himself only as Sasha.

The bodies themselves were contorted by rigor mortis after being left outside for weeks in the frigid winter. Work was briefly interrupted by the sounds of gunfire in the distance, then resumed.

It was not clear whether the Ukrainian soldiers were forced into performing the recovery work or volunteered, but rebels have previously forced POWs to perform hard labor. The Ukrainian captives were assisted by rescue workers employed by the separatists.

“These guys were fighting here. I don’t know what for. They were following the orders of their president, and they respected that order,” said rebel commander Mikhail Tolstykh, known widely by nom de guerre Givi. “We all are military men here and we have to respect our enemy.”

Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian troops had battled regularly over Donetsk’s airport since May, when government forces decisively rebuffed separatist attempts to take the showcase terminal built to help Ukraine host the 2012 Euro soccer championships. Fighting over the terminal surged in mid-January, swiftly unraveling a monthlong truce.

Buckling under a barrage of artillery and small arms attacks, Ukrainian forces conceded Jan. 22 that they had lost much of the terminal.

Ukrainian Defense Ministry spokesman Vladislav Seleznev has said 15 servicemen were killed in fighting over the airport in January. Their bodies have lain uncollected since then.

Vasily Budik, an adviser to Ukraine’s Defense Minister, wrote on his Facebook page that seven bodies were recovered Wednesday and that work at the airport would continue.

Neither side has revealed how many captives they currently hold, but AP journalists saw up to 25 government POWs working at the airport Wednesday. The rebels handed over 139 captive Ukrainian soldiers last weekend in exchange for 52 people held by the government.

The fighting in eastern Ukraine has killed nearly 5,800 people since April. Russia denies charges that it is arming and supporting the rebels, but Western nations and NATO reject those denials as absurd. A peace plan agreed upon earlier this month by the leaders of Russia and Ukraine, brokered by France and Germany, aims to cement a cease-fire and begin a pullback of heavy weapons.

Ukraine’s military said rebel violations of the cease-fire persisted Wednesday but had fallen off in recent days.

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