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Putin agrees to consider setting up agency to document Kiev’s crimes

The president also said he would ask the Prosecutor General's Office and the Investigative Committee to think about the issue

MOSCOW, December 7. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday agreed to consider setting up a government agency or commission to document crimes by Kiev.

He was responding to an idea by Yevgeny Myslovsky, head of a regional non-governmental foundation called Antimafia that seeks to fight organized crime and corruption, to set up an agency similar to a commission that the Soviet Union established in 1942 to investigate Nazi crimes. He also put forward the idea to enlist the help of law enforcement veterans so they instruct young investigators about organizing their work process. Myslovsky made the proposals at a meeting that Putin held with the Council for the Development of Civil Society and Human Rights.

"As for criminal investigations, yes, of course you are right. Well, we all understand the reality of the events that are happening. To record, investigate, record these crimes, especially strikes at civilian and residential neighborhoods, is important. Maybe, you are right about setting up some general agency that will deal with that, and a government commission. Let’s give it a thought," Putin said.

The president also said he would ask the Prosecutor General's Office and the Investigative Committee to think about the issue. The idea of leaning on law enforcement veterans for help also requires consideration, he said.

"So they help either as mentors or as people who summarize the materials at hand, veterans of law enforcement agencies. I will request the Prosecutor General's Office to deal with this, and we will certainly think about it. But of course, it’s necessary to put it on the record, it’s necessary to do it professionally, I fully agree with you," Putin said.