Moscow explosion kills 2 Russian police officers tied to Ukrainian POW abuse, intelligence source says

Authored by kyivindependent.com and submitted by Beautiful_Pushs
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Police officers involved in the torture of Ukrainian prisoners of war were killed in an explosion in Moscow, sources within Ukraine's military intelligence (HUR) told the Kyiv Independent on Dec. 24.

The attack highlights the ongoing targeting of Russian officials linked to war crimes in Ukraine. Russia's Investigative Committee confirmed that the explosion killed two police officers.

Ukrainian intelligence sources said the officers had previously taken part in Russia's war against Ukraine and were implicated in the abuse of Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs).

According to the HUR sources, the officers were involved in the systematic torture of Ukrainian POWs, practices that violate the Geneva Conventions and the laws and customs of war.

The intelligence sources said the attack took place at around 1 a.m., when a local resident approached a police car parked near a police station and threw an improvised explosive device through the vehicle's window. The blast killed two officers inside the car and injured two more.

The attacker acted "in protest against the Kremlin's aggressive policy," according to the HUR sources. Russian authorities have not confirmed this claim.

Russia's Investigative Committee said it opened a criminal case under articles related to attempts on the life of law enforcement officers and the illegal trafficking of explosive devices.

Russian forces have faced repeated accusations from Ukraine and international organizations of widespread mistreatment of captives since the start of the full-scale invasion.

The incident follows another high-profile attack in Moscow earlier this week. On Dec. 22, Fanil Sarvarov, head of the operational training department of the Russian Armed Forces General Staff, was killed in a car bombing, the Investigative Committee reported.

kingtacticool on December 24th, 2025 at 13:49 UTC »

A second bombing in a week in Moscow.

Thats sending a hell of a message.

frissio on December 24th, 2025 at 13:43 UTC »

The Nazis were hunted down to the end of their days, and while many people nowadays are gleefully committing crimes drunk with power as they are, hopefully many will also find their due comeuppance in one way or another.

It's likely the Russians (officials and soldiers both) realize that, which is why they demanded amnesty in their peace diktats, except they're realizing that the laws and deals they were so eager to flout and undermine can't protect them now.

Straight_Tip7975 on December 24th, 2025 at 13:17 UTC »

Revenge will reach all who deserve it.