Public tribunal releases more testimonies exposing Kiev forces' atrocities in Selidovo
According to the report, Ukrainian forces are known to have killed at least a hundred civilians
MOSCOW, November 26. /TASS/. The chairman of the international public tribunal on crimes committed by Ukrainian neo-Nazis and their accomplices, Maxim Grigoriev, has published more evidence of the Kiev regime's mass killings of civilians in the town of Selidovo in the Donetsk People’s Republic.
"We are in the town of Selidovo. Here, our international public tribunal for crimes committed by Ukrainian neo-Nazis has gathered evidence of the Ukrainian military’s mass killings of civilians. We have interviewed eyewitnesses—those whose relatives and friends were killed," Grigoriev said in a video posted on his Telegram channel.
The tribunal’s chairman said that before retreating from Selidovo, militants would burst into private homes and shoot civilians. Unmistakable traces of firearms on the victims’ bodies have been confirmed by medics.
In multi-storey apartment buildings, private homes, and on the streets, the tribunal’s activists have found the bodies of civilians shot in the head and chest.
"There are witnesses to confirm this. Many of them lost friends, neighbors, or relatives. Some witnessed the killings firsthand," the post reads.
According to the report, Ukrainian forces are known to have killed at least a hundred civilians, but in all likelihood, the number of those who died at the militants’ hands is much higher.
Local residents testify
The Telegram channel has also published accounts by eyewitnesses and victims of the neo-Nazis’ atrocities. A woman resident of Selidovo recalls how a Ukrainian sniper shot her friends and neighbors.
"Those people were trying to get out of their shelters, hoping to bury the bodies of the dead, only to be shot themselves. A sniper in house No. 12 on Shchors Street killed about 20 people that way. In our yard, we found at least eight bodies," the woman says.
Another resident of Selidovo says his whole family was massacred. Neo-Nazis shot all his relatives. He was the only survivor.
"On October 24 this year, my family was shot by the Ukrainian military right outside our home. They took my wife, grandson, son, daughter-in-law, and her mother outside and put them against the wall. A few days later, I returned to the house. At the site where they had been shot, I found the remains—charred bodies, bone fragments, and personal belongings. I gathered what I could find into five bags and buried them in front of the entrance to our apartment building. This is all that is left of my family," the man says.
The tribunal continues to collect evidence of the Kiev regime's war crimes. All of them are properly documented, with the detailed names of witnesses attached. The testimonies are summarized and sent to international organizations.
The international public tribunal, established in May 2022, includes civic activists from more than 30 countries. More than 1,000 witnesses and victims of the Ukrainian military’s crimes have been interviewed since.