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Submission: On April 11 via api from BE — Scanned from DE
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Accessibility statementSkip to main content Search InputSearch SectionsMenu SectionsMenu The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness Try four weeks free Sign inProfileSolid Sign inProfileSolid Advertisement Close The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness World Africa Americas Asia Europe Middle East Foreign Correspondents World WILL RUSSIA BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE? REPORTERS IN UKRAINE ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS. THREE POST REPORTERS WRITING FROM UKRAINE WILL ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS ON TUESDAY By Joyce Koh , Max Bearak and Louisa Loveluck April 12, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. EDT By Joyce Koh , Max Bearak and Louisa Loveluck April 12, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. EDT Returning to Bucha to search for loved ones in a mass grave Families returned to Bucha, Ukraine, in the hopes of finding missing loved ones, as investigators exhumed 21 bodies from a mass grave April 8. At least 67 bodies are suspected to be buried behind the Church of St. Andrew and All Saints. Investigators exhumed 21 of at least 67 bodies suspected to be lying in a mass grave in Bucha, Ukraine, April 8. (Video: Joyce Koh/The Washington Post, Photo: The Washington Post) Share this story The scale of the war’s violence and depravity has been coming into focus across towns in Ukraine. In places such as Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, civilians and local officials have been clearing streets and homes of hundreds of decomposing corpses. Town by town, investigators have been building war crimes cases, documenting evidence they hope to use in prosecutions against Russia’s military and leaders. Investigators in the past week have found evidence of torture, beheadings and dismemberments, and intentional burnings in Bucha. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for the latest updates on Russia's war in Ukraine.ArrowRight World leaders, including President Biden, have called reports of mass graves in Bucha “war crimes” and called for Russian President Vladimir Putin to be held accountable. Story continues below advertisement Meanwhile, the battlefield appears to be shifting. After moving away from efforts to take the capital, Kyiv, Russia’s invasion is proceeding primarily on two fronts, said Ukrainian officials: against the southeastern port city of Mariupol, and in the country’s far east, especially the contested region of Luhansk. This next phase of the war in Ukraine could be “protracted” — “measured in months or longer,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan warned. Advertisement What do you want to know about the war in Ukraine? Post reporters Joyce Koh, Max Bearak and Louisa Loveluck, who have all been reporting on the ground in Bucha, will answer your questions on Tuesday at 1 p.m. Eastern time. Send us your question below. The question box includes a space for your name, but this is optional. Your question may be edited for accuracy and clarity. The event is not live yet.You can join the conversation COMING SOON Live event starts April 12, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. GMT 12 Apr Apr 12 17:00 Notifications 0 There are no notifications Mark all as read Remind me * Google calendar * Yahoo calendar * Outlook calendar Don't miss the event, add to your calendar! Online Visitors Moderator replying... Visitors chatting now Ask a question Question stream area Questions filter All all chats 0 new updates Load More Loading... 0 new updates Fetching data Chat area Question input area. 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Read some of our recent coverage: * In Bucha, the scope of Russian barbarity is coming into focus * Town by town, Ukrainian prosecutors build Russian war crimes cases * Has Russia committed war crimes or genocide in Ukraine? * What I’ve seen in Bucha Sign up for Today’s WorldView, a weekday briefing that will bring you analysis on the most important global story of the day, top reads, interesting ideas and opinions to know. Sammy Westfall, an assistant editor on the foreign desk, and Teddy Amenabar, an editor on The Post’s audience team, produced this Q&A. READER Q&AS EXPLORE THE POST’S REGULAR CHATS WITH OUR REPORTERS AND COLUMNISTS Advice: Carolyn Hax takes your questions about the strange train we call life. Food: Have a cooking question? Ask our food team. Or chat with restaurant critic Tom Sietsema. Parenting: Get parenting advice from Meghan Leahy. Sports: Send Barry Svrluga your questions on the latest headlines in sports. Opinions: Ask Eugene Robinson your questions. Or join Jennifer Rubin on Fridays. See our full Q&A schedule here. GiftOutline Gift Article Loading... Advertisement Advertisement Loading... 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