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Josep Borrell says Russia will be held accountable regardless of peace deal

“What matters is that the war ends in a way where there is accountability,” said the head of European diplomacy this Sunday, November 10, a few days after the election of Donald Trump to the presidency. White House.

Russia will have to answer for the war crimes committed in Ukraine and pay for the destruction committed whatever the future peace agreement, said this Sunday, November 10, the head of diplomacy of the European Union Josep Borrell.

“Peace, for it to be peace and not just a ceasefire, must be just and lasting,” stressed Josep Borrell, the first senior European leader to visit Ukraine since the US election. of Donald Trump, whose promise of a rapid end to the war makes the Ukrainians fear being forced to give in to Russia's territorial demands.

“It is a warning to those who say that this war must end, and therefore they might as well end it as quickly as possible, no matter how,” added Josep Borrell during a trip to the Cherniguiv region, in the north of the country.

“What matters is that the war ends in a way where there is accountability, that it is not just an economic reconstruction, but that everyone is accountable” for their actions, he said. said, after visiting the basement of a village school in Yahidne where 300 Ukrainian civilians had been detained for a month in atrocious conditions by Russian troops after the 2022 invasion.

According to the kyiv authorities, 11 people died during this captivity which ended when the Russian forces had to retreat.

An international war crimes tribunal?

Josep Borrell also suggested that the approximately $300 billion in Russian state assets frozen by the West could be used for the reconstruction of Ukraine after the war. “This could be used to pay these bills and to compensate the people who suffered, for the destruction caused by the Russian invasion,” the European official said.

The new president-elect of the United States Donald Trump questioned during his campaign the continuation of American aid to Ukraine and said he could end the war “in 24 hours”, without specifying how. Its recent victory has sparked fears in Ukraine and Europe that kyiv could be pressured into making concessions to Russia to secure a quick peace deal.

According to Ukrainian authorities, around 140,000 war crimes cases have been opened since the start of the Russian invasion. President Vladimir Putin and several senior Russian military officials are the subject of arrest warrants from the International Criminal Court. Ranked soldiers have already been tried in absentia in Ukraine for individual acts, but bringing those responsible to court remains a challenge.

For kyiv, the question of prosecuting crimes attributed to Russia is therefore an integral part of a possible peace agreement. Efforts to establish an international tribunal have not been successful and so far international partners like the EU and the United States have mainly helped the Ukrainians gather evidence and conduct their own investigations.

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