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In Ukraine, Russian collaborators flee or face justice

Where Ukrainian troops have recaptured territory from the Russians, the first order of business has been to clear the area of mines. Then come state security agents, looking for collaborators.

Most of them will have fled with retreating Russian soldiers, but that does not mean they won’t be investigated. So far the authorities have registered over 2,000 cases of alleged collaboration and launched legal proceedings against 456 suspects.

Why We Wrote This

Liberating Ukrainian territory from Russian troops is more than a matter of military victory. It means tracking down Russian collaborators too.

In Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine, sympathy for Moscow is not uncommon, and that in itself is not a criminal offense. But some Ukrainian policemen switched sides, and other people joined Russian-led local administrations.

“The range of motivations [to collaborate] is quite wide,” says the SBU, the Ukrainian domestic security agency, in an email. But “the most important drivers are ideology and money.”

The hunt for collaborators has spread across the liberated territories in eastern Ukraine. Sometimes it is just a matter of talking to residents about who did what during the occupation; sometimes suspects are subjected to interrogation and lie detector tests.

The police have to be careful. Izium police Chief Dmytro Griuchak says he receives dozens of allegations a day. “We are trying to separate real cases of collaboration from those of neighbors trying to settle personal scores,” he explains.

Volodymyr Rybalkin, dressed in black and escorted by young soldiers, stands among the rubble of this battle-scarred town chatting with residents as they queue for bread. Appointed head of the Sviatohirsk military administration when Ukrainian troops liberated the area in September, he is overseeing the distribution of food parcels to local residents.

And he is using the opportunity to take the pulse of the community, trying to establish just who did what in Sviatohirsk during the Russian occupation. “We are undertaking stabilization measures,” he says. “Establishing incidents of collaboration is part of that process.”

About 650 people stayed in the town when it fell to the Russian army. Some of them were sympathetic to Moscow – not unusual in this part of eastern Ukraine – but did not necessarily break the law. Others, Mr. Rybalkin is discovering, did cross the line.

Why We Wrote This

Liberating Ukrainian territory from Russian troops is more than a matter of military victory. It means tracking down Russian collaborators too.

Determining who collaborated with Russia has been a top priority for the Ukrainian intelligence services whenever territory is restored to Ukrainian control. The task of identifying and punishing collaborators is complicated by the fact that many of the most important suspects have fled to Russia; others left the region and have melted into the general population elsewhere in Ukraine.

But the authorities have registered 2,319 cases of alleged collaboration in recently liberated areas of Ukraine, according to police figures, and legal proceedings have been launched against 456 suspects.

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