Vienna 4/6/2022
On March 31, on the second day after the Russian troops withdrew, the mayor of the city of Bucha Anatoly Fedoruk recorded a video in which he announced a great victory over the attacker.
The mayor had to struggle not to trip over any of the more than 300 bodies that were left on the streets.
In the article in German, in which the Ukrainian police, according to their own statements, carried out a “cleansing operation” in Bucha the day before the corpse videos appeared, we read:
Ukrainian police posted on Facebook that they conducted a “clean-up” in Bucha a day before videos showing bodies scattered around the settlement surfaced as the war of words over the alleged “war crime” continues.
The only evidence so far pointing to Russian involvement are the claims of the Ukrainian authorities, which the mainstream media circulates incessantly and without the slightest skepticism.
CBS’ Margaret Brennan admitted that Ukraine President Zelensky’s team “handed” the videos to her and, as journalist Michael Tracey wrote, they were broadcast “without any independent confirmation”.
The thought that the Ukrainian authorities, who have already been caught in countless incidents to advocate for increased NATO military engagement, would lie about this issue does not seem to even be considered.
A timeline made available by the New York Times suggests that pro-Ukrainian neo-Nazi fighters from Azov invaded Bucha after Russian troops left and Bucha’s mayor announced the city’s liberation, without doing so to mention any atrocities.
Translation from Ukrainian of the text in the photo below: Today, April 2, special forces of the National Police of Ukraine in the liberated city of Bucha in the Kyiv region began cleaning the territory of saboteurs and allies of the Russian troops.
In the meantime, the citizens of Ukraine have taken the judiciary into their own hands.
Author of the article: Marek Wojcik