
Ukraine on Friday marked the one-year anniversary of the liberation of Bucha, the town just north of Kyiv that has become synonymous with Russian atrocities and alleged war crimes.
Bucha was occupied by Russia for 33 days, during which time the population was "terrorized," the town's mayor Anatolii Fedoruk said on Telegram.
“For 33 days, the Bucha community was under occupation. Our villages — Blystavytsia, Syniak, Havrylivka, Zdvyzhivka, Lubianka, Myrotske — were the first to be hit," Fedoruk said.
“For 28 days of occupation, the fierce enemy terrorized the civilian population of Bucha."
Fedoruk described how “the days of occupation changed us forever inside,” adding that they “united us in the struggle for the most valuable things: freedom, our home and our loved ones.”
“We remember the name of every Bucha resident whose life was taken by ruthless enemies. Despite all that pain, we have survived, united and continue to work to rebuild the destroyed city and return to peaceful life,” Fedoruk said on Telegram.
Some context: According to the Ukrainian Prosecutor’s Office, around 700 people died in the town of Bucha and around 1,400 in the Bucha district overall.
International investigators from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe concluded last July that atrocities committed by Russian troops in Bucha amounted to crimes against humanity and said there was "credible evidence" suggesting violations of "even the most fundamental human rights." The experts said that photographic and video evidence "appear to show that Russian forces carried out targeted, organized killings of civilians in Bucha."
The Russian government has consistently denied the accusations and claimed the images were "a hoax."