Satellites Show the Alarming Extent of Russian Detention Camps
A day after the six-month anniversary of the start of the war in Ukraine, a new report reveals never before seen information about Russia's filtration camp system in eastern Ukraine, in which civilians and prisoners of war are detained, interrogated, and, at times, forcibly deported to Russia. The researchers have also identified what they believe are graves near camps where prisoners of war (POWs) were being held. The camps, all of which are in the eastern region of Donetsk, were identified by the Conflict Observatory, a US-government-funded partnership between Yale University's Humanitarian Research Lab, the Smithsonian Cultural Rescue Initiative, artificial-intelligence company PlanetScape Ai, and the geographic-information-system mapping software Esri. Their report used images from Telegram channels, commercial satellites, and existing documentation to identify the locations of camps used by the Russian military for interrogation, detention, and registration of Ukrainian civilians, some of whom are then forcibly deported to Russia. "This is the first report to conclusively identify to high confidence 21 facilities engaged in the filtration of Ukrainian civilians," says Nathaniel Raymond, a coleader of the Humanitarian Research Lab and lecturer at Yale's Jackson School of Global Affairs.
Aug-25-2022, 18:00:00 GMT
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- Ukraine > Donetsk Oblast
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