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Finland charges a combatant with war crimes allegedly committed in 2014 in Ukraine

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Finland charges a combatant with war crimes allegedly committed in 2014 in Ukraine
News

News

Finland charges a combatant with war crimes allegedly committed in 2014 in Ukraine

2024-11-01 03:35 Last Updated At:03:40

HELSINKI (AP) — Prosecutors in Finland filed charges Thursday over alleged war crimes in 2014 by a combatant who fought against Ukrainian forces in a Russian-backed separatist region of Ukraine.

The National Prosecution Authority did not identify the suspect when announcing the five charges in a statement, but Finnish media outlets have identified him as Russian national Yan Petrovsky, who had been living in Finland under the alias Voislav Torden. The suspect has denied involvement in the crimes.

“The charges are related to the suspect’s activities in a unit called Rusich, which has fought on the side of the Russian-backed Luhansk separatist region against Ukraine,” the Finnish prosecutors said.

Petrovsky, 37, was arrested in July 2023 at Helsinki Airport as he was headed for Nice in southern France with his family. Finnish media outlets said Petrovsky had managed to enter Finland despite a EU-wide entry ban with the help of a new identity and his wife’s student status in the Nordic country.

The suspect is "accused of having participated, as the unit’s deputy commander, in acts that violate the laws of war, in which he and the unit’s soldiers have killed a total of 22 Ukrainian soldiers and seriously wounded four," prosecutors said.

They added that the suspect is accused of “acts contrary to the laws of war regarding the way of warfare and the treatment of wounded and killed enemy soldiers."

Finland’s Supreme Court has earlier ruled that Petrovsky cannot be extradited to Ukraine, where he faces an arrest warrant, due to the risk of inhumane prison conditions there. Finnish prosecutors said Thursday that the Nordic country has an obligation to try him.

The prosecutors said more information would be made public once the case is taken up in Helsinki District Court, unless the court decides otherwise. The trial of Petrovsky is expected to start on Dec. 5 and last until the end of January 2025.

The investigation into the suspect, who earlier resided in Norway, was conducted by Finland's National Bureau of Investigation, or NBI, and the police agency said earlier this month that it had exchanged information with Ukrainian and European officials as well as the International Criminal Court.

Petrovsky has been on the European Union’s sanctions list against Russia for allegedly being a founding member of the far-right paramilitary group Rusich, which is suspected of terrorism crimes in Ukraine and is connected with Russia’s mercenary Wagner Group,

In March 2014, Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula. Then, separatist forces backed by Moscow began an uprising in the eastern Ukraine region known as the Donbas, which grew into a long-running conflict, leaving thousands of dead.

In February 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his war against Ukraine that continues to this day, with tens of thousands of deaths on both sides.

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Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen contributed.

Russian national Voislav Torden, center, suspected of committing war crimes in Ukraine, sits in Helsinki District Court with legal assistant Heikki Lampela at right on Dec. 18, 2023. (Markku Ulander/Lehtikuva via AP)

Russian national Voislav Torden, center, suspected of committing war crimes in Ukraine, sits in Helsinki District Court with legal assistant Heikki Lampela at right on Dec. 18, 2023. (Markku Ulander/Lehtikuva via AP)

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A high-ranking elected official in Southern California’s Orange County has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery in a far-reaching scheme that misused COVID-19 relief funds aimed at helping the elderly.

Andrew Do, a county supervisor who recently resigned his post, entered the plea in federal court in Santa Ana, California, on Thursday under an agreement with federal prosecutors.

Do, 61, apologized to his family and people who depended on him in a statement he read in court.

“I have great sorrow for my actions,” he said.

Authorities said Do took more than half a million dollars in bribes while helping ensure COVID-relief funds were channeled to an organization that claimed to be feeding elderly and disabled people. The group, Viet America Society, where Do’s daughter, Rhiannon Do, was listed as an officer, didn’t spend most of the money it received for the meals on providing them, authorities said, adding some of the funds were spent on real estate.

The case comes in a long-running investigation into Viet America Society and as Orange County — which is home to more than 3 million people between Los Angeles and San Diego — filed a civil lawsuit alleging the group misused federal funds. Federal officials said only 15% of more than $9 million funneled to the group went to provide meals.

Andrew Do came to the country as a Vietnamese refugee and went on to become a prosecutor and city councilmember before winning a seat on Orange County’s five-person board of supervisors. He is scheduled to be sentenced on March 31.

Authorities have said Rhiannon Do is cooperating with the investigation and won’t be charged.

CORRECTS NUMBER FILE - U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada, left, OC District Attorney Todd Spitzer, center, and FBI Special Agent Ted Docks, speak at a press conference on Oct. 22, 2024, in Santa Ana, Calif., announcing that O.C. Supervisor Andrew Do agreed to plead guilty to accepting more than $550,000 in bribes and voting in favor of more than $9 million in COVID funds to a charity affiliated with one of his daughters. (Mindy Schauer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)

CORRECTS NUMBER FILE - U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada, left, OC District Attorney Todd Spitzer, center, and FBI Special Agent Ted Docks, speak at a press conference on Oct. 22, 2024, in Santa Ana, Calif., announcing that O.C. Supervisor Andrew Do agreed to plead guilty to accepting more than $550,000 in bribes and voting in favor of more than $9 million in COVID funds to a charity affiliated with one of his daughters. (Mindy Schauer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)

FILE - Supervisor Andrew Do, right, listens to Supervisor Todd Spitzer, left, during questioning of Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas in front of the Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting in Santa Ana on June 27, 2017. (Sam Gangwer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)

FILE - Supervisor Andrew Do, right, listens to Supervisor Todd Spitzer, left, during questioning of Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas in front of the Orange County Board of Supervisors meeting in Santa Ana on June 27, 2017. (Sam Gangwer/The Orange County Register via AP, File)

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