Ukraine condemns Russia’s ‘humiliating death’ after prison attack
The embassy tweet came after more than 50 Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) held by Russia were killed – Azov soldiers reportedly among them.
They died in an attack on Olenivka prison in Russian-held eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine and Russia blame each other for Friday’s attack in the Donetsk region.
Twitter acknowledged that the post from the Russian embassy violated the social media company’s “rules about hateful conduct” – but added that it may be in the public interest to keep it accessible.
Besides the Ukrainian government, many other Twitter users voiced outrage at the tweet.
In a late-night address, Mr Zelensky said “full support” will be offered to the hundreds of thousands of people still there.
What happened there on Friday remains unclear. Unverified Russian video footage of the aftermath shows a tangle of wrecked bunk beds and badly charred bodies.
After the attack, the Russian embassy in the UK tweeted that Azov “militants deserve execution, but death not by firing squad but by hanging because they’re not real soldiers. They deserve a humiliating death”.
The tweet included a video clip showing a couple in a wrecked building, accusing Azov troops of having shelled their home. The embassy’s call for execution repeats what the man in the video says.
Azov troops were forced to lay down weapons in May after fiercely defending for weeks Azovstal, a giant steelworks in the south-eastern port of Mariupol that was eventually captured by Russia.
The Azov Regiment was a nationalist group with far-right links when it was set up in 2014. It was later incorporated into Ukraine’s National Guard.
Russia has long accused the regiment of being neo-Nazis and war criminals, as part of the Kremlin’s propaganda campaign to justify its invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022.
“In the 21st Century, only savages and terrorists can say at a diplomatic level that people deserve to be executed by hanging for nothing. The RF [Russia] is a state sponsor of terrorism. What more proof do you need?” he said.
Ukraine has called for the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to be allowed to investigate the deaths at Olenivka.
Its deputy head of delegation in Ukraine, Daniel Bunnskog, said granting access to POWs was an obligation under the Geneva Conventions.
Later on Saturday, the Russian defence ministry was quoted by Russian state-run media as saying that UN and Red Cross experts were officially invited by Moscow “in the interests of carrying out an objective investigation”.
Ukraine says the site was targeted by Russia in an effort to destroy evidence of torture and killing. President Volodymyr Zelensky described the incident as a “deliberate Russian war crime”.
Ukraine’s foreign ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko tweeted: “There is no difference between Russian diplomats calling for the execution of Ukrainian prisoners of war and Russian troops doing it in Olenivka.
“They are all accomplices in these war crimes and must be held accountable.”
DNR spokesman Daniil Bezsonov said the strike had killed 53 people and wounded 75. He called it a “direct hit on a barracks holding prisoners”.
Russia’s defence ministry said the strike had been carried out with US-made Himars artillery and it accused Ukraine of a “deliberately perpetrated” provocation. The ministry produced fragments of what it said were rockets fired by the Himars system.