So were going to nail Putin The ironclad prosecutor speaks

“So we’re going to nail Putin”: The ironclad prosecutor speaks

Irina Venediktova she is the “iron prosecutor” hired by Volodymyr Zelensky to find evidence against the crimes committed by the Russians during the invasion. You have done this and already provided part of your documentation so that the International Court of Justice in The Hague has already opened investigations into war crimes and crimes against humanity. A very important finding for Irina Venediktova, 43, a former law professor who, at the age of two, is working to clean up Ukraine’s public administration, known worldwide for its very high levels of corruption and inefficiency. “We will work first and foremost to find evidence, testimonies and evidence, nothing will be left unturned. The crimes of the invasion are well documented, nothing can be left to chance,” he told Corriere della Sera.

In recent days, Irina Venediktova has been photographed in the symbolic places of this war, where the greatest atrocities were reported. she went to mass graves from Bucha, Borodyanka, Irpin, Hostomel, Kharkiv and Chernihiv, putting aside the gray ordination suits in favor of the much more practical jackets with amphibians. He walked through the rubble of the destroyed cities, saw with his own eyes, and not through photo and video material, what the Russians left behind. She has approached the front lines of battle to witness firsthand the horrors of the war ravaging her country.

“I would to protect our cities, our children, our people. I don’t have any guns for that. But I am looking for any legal means. I want to save Mariupol and all our besieged urban centers from battle. I think about it all the time, my instrument is the law, I have no other,” explained Irina Venediktova, before adding: “Let’s go to protect innocent civilians and in the meantime we are already trying to protect them against the To compensate for the dictator’s violence Putin: “She is careful with her words, complaining and avoiding overly accusatory statements against Russia in order to avoid escalation. He is not talking about specific crimes at the moment, but wants to have certain evidence in hand to prove: “Before we make concrete allegations, we must collect serious and irrefutable evidence”.

He’s been sending his men there for the past few weeks consult the refugees, the men and women who fled the hell of the invaded and bombed cities to collect their testimonies, the words of those who experienced the horrors of the Russians on their skin. And everything was recorded in the minutes, in the dossiers that The Hague will analyze in order to follow up its investigations.