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Moscow: Orders Investigation into Buka Massacre – Denounces ‘Ukrainian Provocations’

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The head of Russia’s Investigative Committee has ordered a formal investigation into what he called Ukrainian “provocations” following Kiev’s accusations against the Russian armed forces of massacring civilians in the city of Bukhara.

Alexander Bastrykin, the head of Russia’s Investigative Committee, has ordered an investigation into allegations that Ukraine leaked “deliberately false information” about Russia’s armed forces in Bhutan, the commission said in a statement.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry has announced that visual material with dead civilians in the city of Bouka of Ukraine was “ordered” by the US as part of a plan to accuse the Russia.

“Who are the authorities in the provocations? Of course the US and NATO “ The ministry spokeswoman said in an interview with state television on Sunday Maria Zakharova.

As Sakharov said, the immediate outcry of the West for these images with them dead civilians indicates that the subject is part of a plan to tarnish Russia’s reputation.

“In this case, it seems to me that the fact that these statements (for Russia) were made in the first minutes after the appearance of this material leaves no doubt as to who ‘ordered’ this issue.”

Ukrainian authorities announced yesterday that they are investigating the possibility committing war crimes from Russia after the discovery of the bodies of hundreds of people – some of whom were tied up and shot at close range – who were scattered around cities outside the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, after the withdrawal of Russian troops in the area.

Russian authorities say the photos and footage transmitted by Bouka are a “challenge” designed to disrupt peace talks between Moscow and Kyiv.

The Russian Defense Ministry said the images were “another demonstration of the Kiev regime.”

Visual material and photos of corpses of civilians scattered in the city have caused calls from western countries to hold those responsible accountable for war crimes in Ukraine.

Russia, for its part, called for the UN Security Council to convene on Monday to discuss “provocations by extreme Ukrainians,” as Moscow describes it, in Bukhara.

Russia sent tens of thousands of troops to Ukraine on February 24 as part of a “special military operation,” as it calls it, aimed at demilitarizing and “de-Naziizing” its neighbor.

Ukrainian forces are strongly resisting and the West has imposed sweeping sanctions on Russia in an effort to force it to withdraw its forces.

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