All news

Putin vows to continue documenting Kiev’s crimes

This was the Russian president’s reply to a proposal by Sergey Machinsky, first deputy head of the Northwestern Federal District’s Military-Historical Center

ST. PETERSBURG, January 18. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged further efforts on Wednesday to track crimes by the Kiev regime, including against civilians.

Addressing WWII veterans in St. Petersburg on Wednesday, he said: "We certainly must record [the crimes] they have been committing, especially against civilians, and we will do so. The Investigative Committee has been handling this, not only documenting, but analyzing these materials and providing them with a legal assessment. We will definitely continue along this path further."

This was the Russian president’s reply to a proposal by Sergey Machinsky, first deputy head of the Northwestern Federal District’s Military-Historical Center. Machinsky mentioned the long-time joint endeavors between his colleagues and the Investigative Committee in establishing the circumstances of Nazi war crimes during WWII. "They are ready to continue this work in the Donetsk and Lugansk Regions right now," Machinsky assured Putin, as he asked the president to authorize an investigation into the current Nazi crimes, "so that they [neo-Nazis] would be brought to justice."