-
Trans community alarmed as India moves to curb LGBTQ rights
-
Families' nightmare fight for justice in Austria child sex cases
-
Tiger Woods to return to action in TGL with Masters looming
-
Australia, EU agree sweeping new trade pact eight years in the works
-
Back to black: facing energy shock, Asia turns to coal
-
Iran fires new wave of missiles at Israel after denying Trump talks
-
Manila's jeepney drivers struggle as Mideast war sends diesel cost soaring
-
The contenders vying to be next Danish leader
-
India's historic haveli homes caught between revival and ruin
-
Denmark votes in close election, outgoing PM tipped to win
-
N. Korea's Kim vows 'irreversible' nuclear status, warns Seoul of 'merciless' response
-
Pressure on Italy as play-off hopefuls eye 2026 World Cup
-
Malinin and Sakamoto seek solace at figure skating worlds as Olympic champions absent
-
'Perfect Japan' posts spark Gen Z social media backlash
-
Asian stocks rise on Trump U-turn but unease sees oil bounce
-
Pistons halt Lakers streak while Spurs, Thunder win
-
Silence not an option, says Canadian Sikh activist after fresh threats
-
Rennie shakes up All Blacks backroom team as 2027 World Cup looms
-
Australia, EU agree to sweeping new trade pact after eight years
-
Too old? The 92-year-old US judge handling Maduro case
-
Australia, EU agree sweeping new trade pact
-
Sinner, Sabalenka march on in Miami as more seeds crash out
-
US social media addiction trial jury struggles for consensus
-
EU 'concerned' by reports Hungary leaked information to Russia
-
EU chief meets Australian PM as trade talks enter 'last mile'
-
Israel pounds south Beirut, says captured Hezbollah members
-
EU chief to meet Australian PM as trade talks enter 'last mile'
-
Champion Mensik, Medvedev dumped out of Miami Open
-
Jury at US social media addiction trial reports 'difficulty' in finding consensus
-
Stokes eager to lead England recovery after 'hardest period of captaincy'
-
Venezuela protesters demand end to 'hunger' level wages
-
Eight people arrested in Brazil for 'brutal' attack on capybara
-
Audi Q9 – how likely is it to become a reality?
-
Oil slides, stocks rebound on Trump's Iran remarks
-
On Iran, Trump executes his most spectacular U-turn yet
-
Trump announces 'very good' Iran talks denied by Tehran
-
Bill Cosby ordered to pay $19m over sex abuse claim
-
Dodgers eye 'threepeat' as new MLB season welcomes robot umpires
-
Dacia Striker: Stylish and sturdy?
-
Skoda Peaq: New all-electric seven-seater
-
Medvedev ousted by Cerundolo at Miami Open
-
Runway collision kills two pilots at New York airport
-
Bosnian truckers blocked EU freight terminals for a day over visa rules
-
Colombia military aircraft crashes with 125 aboard, many feared dead
-
Rip-offs at the petrol pump?
-
Shakira to wrap up world tour with Madrid residency
-
World gave Israel 'licence to torture Palestinians': UN expert
-
Colombia says 80 troops on crashed aircraft, many feared dead
-
France turns to 2027 race to succeed Macron
-
New Mercedes GLC electric
In flooded south, Ukraine builds landmark ecocide case against Russia
Stood in the cold air of a southern Ukrainian village, dozens of investigators were digging into the ground, collecting dirt, taking photos and planting small red flags in the soil.
Watching over the proceedings was Vladislav Ignatenko, a Ukrainian prosecutor conducting a world-first war crimes investigation into allegations of Russian ecocide.
The case, which Kyiv plans to take to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in some form, is the latest in a string of investigations and challenges that Ukraine hopes will hold Russia accountable -- and make it pay -- for its invasion.
The investigation in the southern Kherson region stems from the extensive flooding caused after the Kakhovka dam was partially destroyed on June 6 in a series of early morning blasts.
Dozens were killed as entire villages became submerged and the United Nations says there was $14 billion of destruction.
Ukraine says Russia blew up the dam and that the extent of the environmental damage constitutes a war crime.
To build its case, it has dispatched a hundreds-strong team of ecological investigators.
"We're going to use every possible method to gather evidence," Ignatenko, 32, told AFP.
Donning a military t-shirt and scrawling in a notebook, he called the hundreds working on the case "pioneers."
Russia has blamed Ukraine for the dam's destruction. Both sides have denied responsibility.
It was under Russia's control and the flooding complicated Ukraine's counteroffensive in the south.
The evidence collected in the village of Chornobaivka is just a small part of Kyiv's case.
"Our next point will be here, in this district of Kherson," Ignatenko said, pointing to a map.
"I'm not going there, it's too dangerous," one of his team protested.
The city has been under constant Russian shelling since Ukraine reclaimed it in November 2022.
- Polluted soil -
In Ukraine, ecocide -- deliberately destroying the natural environment -- is a specific criminal offence.
While the Rome Statute that underpins the ICC does not recognise "ecocide" as a crime in itself, its Article Eight states that large-scale environmental damage can be considered part of a war crimes case.
But the evidential barrier is high.
It must be proven that one side carried out an attack, that it knew it would cause "long-term and severe damage to the natural environment" and that the damage was "excessive" in relation to any perceived military advantage.
Ukraine is unperturbed.
Maksym Popov, a special adviser on environmental crimes to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General, has sent more than 400 prosecutors and investigators to gather evidence and Kyiv plans to prosecute Russia both at home and internationally.
Standing next to a row of houses, Ignatenko pointed to a mark on the wall above the ground.
"The water flooded this field... After conducting an analysis, we will be able to determine whether there are traces of pesticide or hydrocarbons -- polluted soil."
Flooding washed away petrol stations and farmhouses storing pesticides, raising concerns the land is now likely contaminated.
"When the water spilled out, it picked up pollutants and dumped them on land where farm animals were being kept," Ignatenko said.
For its case to succeed, Ukraine will first need to prove Russia blew up the dam.
"That's our conviction. Another investigation is underway to that end," the prosecutor said, as he packed a sample of earth into a plastic bag bearing the Ukrainian police logo.
On May 30 -- a week before the dam exploded -- Russia adopted a law banning the investigation of incidents concerning "hydraulic structures" in parts of Ukraine it claims to have annexed.
- 'Dynamic ecosystem' -
About 300 kilometres (185 miles) upstream, on the outskirts of Zaporizhzhia, biologist Vadym Maniuk walked across dry, crunchy ground.
Beneath his feet were millions of freshwater mussel shells, scattered across the old bed of the Kakhovka reservoir.
"There used to be four metres of water here," Maniuk, an associate professor at Dnipro's Oles Honchar University, told AFP.
"Billions of living organisms were killed suddenly, in a few days," when the reservoir emptied, Maniuk said.
To him, the charges of ecocide are undeniable given the scale of the disaster.
But almost six months later, life is returning, he said.
"We have regained a dynamic ecosystem in just a few months," he said.
The ground is strewn with shells and carp skeletons -- but goats have now taken to grazing on small shrubs.
Locals ride bicycles across the former waterway, weaving between boulders.
Biologists such as Maniuk are currently in a tussle with Ukraine's energy industry over whether to rebuild the dam.
"The scientists are against it, we're fighting against the energy lobby," he said.
It generated "negligible" power and a big reconstruction project would damage the local environment once more, Maniuk argued.
"The people here have already made the area their own. For shepherds and fishermen, the conditions are better."
L.Janezki--BTB