[ad_1]
Upwards of 100,000 Ukrainian civilians have been killed. Economic damage estimated at $750 billion. Two million houses or apartments, several thousand schools, hospitals and health care facilities, and 8400 kilometres of roadway damaged or destroyed. Nearly 10 million refugees and internally displaced people. Enormous environmental devastation, including to 30 per cent of national parks and protected areas. Thirty per cent of the country mined. Perhaps 50,000 Ukrainian soldiers now amputees.
Loading
While the program showed glimpses of warfare near the front line, it says almost nothing about what is going on behind Russian lines in occupied areas. It might seem not too different from quiet moments on the Somme in World War I.
But this is no “normal” occupation. It is a primitive land grab of the kind outlawed since World War II. Five annexed regions – an area the size of South Korea – are being coercively integrated into Russia. Ukrainian identity and culture are being wiped out.
Occupation forces are imposing Russian schooling, media, indoctrination and institutions. Tens of thousands of children have been illegally deported to Russia. Perhaps 1 million or more Russians have moved in, illegally, while 3 million Ukrainians have fled or been forced out.
The tools used to enforce collaboration and compliance include more than 100 torture centres – a “state war policy”, according to the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Australian Alice Edwards. Thousands of Ukrainian businesses have been expropriated, many handed out to cronies of Russian officials or officers.
Loading
This picture of coerced integration, ethnic cleansing and cultural genocide has gradually been pieced together thanks to the United Nations, international NGOs and independent Russian and Ukrainian media. But UN agencies, like independent foreign media, have not been allowed to enter occupied areas to report fully on what has transpired. In some cases, for example with the number of verifiable civilian deaths, they admit they have only seen the tip of the iceberg.
The only occupied civilian area shown in The Ukraine War: the Other Side is the city of Donetsk, with ethnic Russian residents evading or stoically oblivious to occasional shelling. We hear some of the local militias talk about defending their homes and families.
Some may well feel this way, but we hear nothing of how the Donbas “separatist” violence in 2014 was stirred up by Russian propaganda and organised by Russian security operatives. One of those was Igor Girkin, since convicted in absentia for his role in shooting down flight MH17 in 2014.
In another time, place and context, the program might have been an interesting addition to reportage of the war. But to present it as the other side, “a compelling exploration” of the conflict, showing its “full horrific impact” is utterly misguided. It is barely a tiny tip of the iceberg.
We are left with little more than the impression that Russian troops may be relatively ordinary folk, which does nothing to illuminate the major issues around the war. The result may not have been too different if a journalist visited Wehrmacht units on the Eastern Front in 1942. It does very little to help Australians make up their minds about the key issues, as the ABC claims.
Jon Richardson is a Visiting Fellow at the ANU Centre for European Studies. He is a former diplomat who covered Eastern Europe from Moscow (in the USSR and later Russia), Belgrade, London and Canberra.
The Opinion newsletter is a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up here.
[ad_2]
Source link