Russia’s Investigative Committee said on Sunday it had launched a criminal probe into the killing of a Russian war reporter, an incident the country’s defense ministry previously blamed on Ukraine’s use of cluster munitions.
The committee said on its website that “armed Ukrainian formations
targeted and deliberately fired at a group of Russian journalists”
working near Pyatikhatka, in Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhzhia region.
It did not specify the type of weapons or munitions used, but said
Rostislav Zhuravlev, a journalist for RIA state news agency, was killed.
It said his RIA colleague and journalist Konstantin Mikhalchevsky, and
two employees of Izvestia newspaper, Roman Polshakov and Dmitry Shikov,
were injured.
“As part of the investigation, investigators will establish all the
circumstances of the crime against media representatives, as well as
those involved,” it said.
It said the chair of the committee was nominating Zhuravlev, “one of
those journalists who always defended and informed the truth,” for a
medal.
Ukraine, which received supplies of cluster munitions from the United
States this month, has vowed to use them only to dislodge concentrations
of enemy soldiers.
Reuters could not independently verify details of the incident. Both
sides have used cluster munitions during Russia’s 17-month invasion of
Ukraine.
The munitions are banned by many countries because they rain shrapnel
over a wide area and pose a risk to civilians. Some bomblets typically
fail to explode immediately, but can blow up years later.
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