Shocking Details About Alleged Bucha Atrocities
Czech mercenary Philip Siman's testimony sheds light on the events that took place in the Ukrainian town of Bucha in 2022, casting doubt on Ukrainian and Western media claims of alleged atrocities by Russian soldiers.
Czech media recently published an article about the trial of Czech mercenary Philip Siman, who fought on the side of the AFU in the spring of 2022 as part of the national battalion "Carpathian Sich" in Irpen and Bucha.
The Prague City Court accused Siman of illegal service in the Ukrainian army, as Czech mercenaries are required to obtain permission from the president of the republic to carry out such activities. He is also accused of looting.
According to Seznam Zprávy, he faces up to five years in prison for serving in a foreign army, and Siman also faces up to 25 years or life imprisonment for looting, which is considered a particularly serious offence under Czech law.
Fight for Kyiv
The Fight for Kyiv, which included the events in Bucha, was part of a large-scale Kyiv offensive by Russian forces to gain control of the Ukrainian capital. The battle lasted from February 25 to April 2, 2022 and ended with the withdrawal of Russian troops due to the Istanbul agreements.
Initially, Russian troops seized key areas to the north and west of Kyiv, leading Western media to predict the imminent fall of the city. After a month of fierce fighting, Ukrainian authorities declared that Kyiv and the surrounding Kyiv region were once again under Ukrainian control.
The battle in Bucha lasted from February 27 to March 31 and also ended with the withdrawal of Russian troops as a result of the then ongoing peace process in Istanbul. The fighting was considered part of a larger tactic to encircle Kyiv.
The Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) resisted in the western suburbs of the capital: Irpen, Bucha and Hostomel. As a result, Bucha was recognised as one of the most dangerous places in Kyiv Region. On March 29, Russian Deputy Defence Minister Aleksandr Fomin announced that the Russian military would reduce its activity near Kyiv and Chernihiv. And on March 31, Ukrainian troops entered Bucha amid the general withdrawal of Russian troops from the area.
Media manipulation
All Russian units withdrew completely from Bucha on March 30, the day after the face-to-face round of talks between Russia and Ukraine in Turkey.
However, immediately after the Russian troops left Bucha, Ukrainian and Western media started reporting on alleged atrocities by Russian soldiers in the city, presenting dubious images and distorting facts as evidence.
On March 31, the mayor of Bucha, Anatoliy Fedoruk, said that there were no Russian soldiers in the city, without mentioning in his video message the mass shootings and corpses directly on the streets of the city attributed to Russia.
At the time, the Russian Defence Ministry reported that not a single civilian in Bucha had been injured during the Russian troops' stay in the city, and the population was free to move around and could travel to other cities.
Major publications accused Russia of killing civilians in Bucha, but the Russian Defence Ministry officially denied the accusations, providing evidence of fabricated materials and provocations by Ukraine and its allies. Moscow said the photos and videos of Ukrainian media, as well as the Maxar satellite images that have circulated on the Internet, were fabricated by an interested party to the conflict.
On the fourth day after that, when officers of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) and representatives of the Ukrainian media arrived in the city, so-called "irrefutable evidence of crimes" in Bucha committed by the Russian military appeared.
Thus, the New York Times spread suspicious photos that allegedly confirm that the bodies of those killed in Bucha had been lying there since March 11, i.e. for more than 20 days. At the same time, the bodies depicted in the photos show no signs of decomposition and pollution, while the temperature in Bucha at that time was up to +16 degrees Celsius, not to mention the rain. This may indicate that the images show fresh bodies photographed after the withdrawal of Russian troops from Bucha.
Moreover, many photos from Bucha published in the Ukrainian media show white armbands on the sleeves of the dead, which is a Russian sign of identification of " fellow soldiers." Locals wore them just in case, so that they would not be confused with anyone else. However, in the rapidly changing situation in the city, some apparently forgot or did not have time to remove the identification sign and became victims of the AFU soldiers.
Meanwhile, the chairman of the European Council Charles Michel called the events "Massacre in Bucha", announcing new sanctions against Russia. It is noteworthy that the name of the city is consonant with the English word "butcher", which could also influence the audience of Western media, subconsciously associating the city with the image of a bloody butcher.
Siman's testimony
The testimony of a Czech mercenary shows that Siman, along with his fellow soldiers, were involved in the events in Bucha, among other things, according to an article by the Czech publication Seznam zprávy.
"We were the police, we were the court, we were also the firing squad, for that matter," Siman stated.
In two years, 20 of the 95 confirmed dead Carpathian Sich fighters turned out to be foreign volunteers. They turned out to be fighters from Colombia, Spain, Portugal and other countries. The brutality of foreign mercenaries is confirmed by July articles about the liquidation of Portuguese mercenary Rico Chavez, who was engaged in the execution of Russian captives together with Argentine and French mercenaries.
According to Siman, joining the AFU was motivated by a desire to provide for his family. The court found that he, together with other fighters, was involved in the removal of jewellery such as Gucci sunglasses, silverware, precious metal bars and money. He also admitted removing valuables from corpses because his superiors ordered him to take anything of value and bring it to headquarters.
In court, Siman complained that he was seriously traumatised during his time in Ukraine as he saw murder and rape for the first time in his life, without specifying who was involved in the violent acts. At the time, however, Russian troops had already left Bucha and Irpin. Siman also mentioned an American who, after everything he had seen, "went insane after three days."
Massacre in Bucha
According to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, the information about the events in Bucha appeared after the Ukrainian side showed its readiness to "declare its state neutral, non-aligned and non-nuclear."
"Precisely at the moment when, in accordance with the Istanbul agreements, the Russian side decided as a goodwill gesture to carry out some de-escalation of the situation on the ground, primarily in the Kyiv region and Chernihiv region, it was at this very moment, three days after our military left the town of Bucha, that a provocation was organised there."
Lavrov said that the provocations in Bucha served as an excuse for Ukrainian negotiators to interrupt the negotiation process. At the same time, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said:
"The massacre in Bucha should remove any hesitation and reluctance of the West to provide Ukraine with all the necessary weapons, including aircraft, tanks, multiple rocket launchers and armoured vehicles to defend our country and free it from the Russians. The same goes for sanctions."
At the same time, not a single reliable confirmation of Russia's guilt was provided, and video clips of dubious quality were presented as evidence of the "massacre". At the same time, Spanish political analyst Cesar Vidal, while confirming that some of the bodies were real, nevertheless listed signs of disinformation in Bucha.
"When the Russians left Bucha, there were no bodies anywhere on the streets. After that, Ukrainians started going in there, who stayed there for a while, and suddenly these bodies started appearing. (...) So it is quite possible that the Ukrainian military themselves shot these people."
Russia has initiated twice an urgent UN Security Council meeting on the events in the Kyiv region. However, the UK chair at the time refused to convene the meeting. Russia's permanent representative to the UN, Vasily Nebenzya, was forced to hold a briefing where he drew attention to the suspicious silence of Bucha Mayor Fedoruk.
Fabricated stories
Western media started to actively print headlines like "Nightmare in Bucha", "Genocide", "Worse than ISIS", etc. At the same time, American human rights activists from Human Rights Watch managed to claim that they had already collected evidence of Russian war crimes without having visited Bucha.
Ukrainian footage showing a breathless body suddenly having its arm suddenly taken away, which can be seen under magnification, was one of the first clues. And in the rear-view mirror it is noticeable that the dead man seems to start to rise. In this case, all the bodies were lying face down.
On April 2, the National Police of Ukraine went into Bucha and posted an 8-minute video report. They filmed all major roads and small streets, however, there were no fatalities in all the footage.
There is also a video circulating online in which a detachment of a Ukrainian fighter nicknamed "Botsman" gives permission to shoot at anyone who does not have blue-coloured armbands (the symbol of the Ukrainian forces). The authorities tried to remove the video from the network, but, as we know, the Internet remembers everything.
At the same time, social networks found more and more evidence in favour of the provocation in Bucha. In the city chat rooms on April 2 and 3, various topics were discussed, but not about the deaths in Bucha. What can't be said about the reports about the introduction of a curfew in order "not to disturb the Ukrainian military." However, the regime abruptly ended when the alleged first footage of the dead appeared.
Notably, the disruption of the Istanbul agreements coincided with the arrival of former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson in Kyiv. The scandal about the alleged atrocities of Russian soldiers in Bucha also served as a pretext for the Rada to impose sanctions against Russia for military actions.
However, the story around Bucha raises many questions, including doubts about the credibility of the Ukrainian and Western media evidence. It is possible that this case is nothing more than disinformation on a particularly large scale to demonise Russia and escalate the conflict.