ACLED Regional Overview – Europe, Caucasus, and Central Asia (2 – 8 April 2022)

Last week in Europe, Central Asia, and the Caucasus, conflict in Ukraine continued amid the Russian retreat from the northern regions. Demonstrations in solidarity with Ukraine continued across the region. The ruling parties secured the win in the elections in Serbia and Hungary amid accusations of election irregularities. In France, the death of an imprisoned militant Corsican separatist continued to spark demonstration activity and violence. In Switzerland, police killed the suspected abductor of the head of the Federal Commission for Vaccinations.

In Ukraine, Ukrainian forces continued operations in the north of the country last week amid the withdrawal of Russian forces from the northern regions. By 8 April, Russian troops had fully pulled out of the Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Sumy regions (Kyiv Independent, 6 April 2022; Ukrinform, 9 April 2022). Heavy fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces continued in the eastern and southern regions of the country, with the majority of armed clashes and shelling events recorded in the Kharkiv, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhia regions. This violence contributed to the 139% increase in violence in Ukraine last month relative to the past year, flagged by ACLED’s Conflict Change Map, which first warned of increased violence to come in the country in the past month.1 Despite the ongoing daily clashes, Russia did not make any significant advances last week (ISW, 10 April 2022). Nevertheless, fighting is expected to escalate in this part of the country amid predictions that Russia will redeploy troops withdrawn from northern Ukraine to the eastern and southern regions in the coming weeks (The Washington Post, 4 April 2022).

Ukrainian and foreign authorities launched investigations last week into war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in previously occupied territories (Independent, 12 April 2022). The Ukrainian Prosecutor General reported that authorities have discovered the bodies of over 1,200 civilians in the Kyiv region alone (Ukrinform, 10 April 2022).2 Multiple reports of sexual violence perpetrated by Russian troops also surfaced last week, including the reported rapes of more than 25 girls and women during the occupation of Bucha in the Kyiv region in March (BBC, 12 April 2022). These events contributed to the 1073% increase in violence in the Kyiv region last month relative to the past year flagged by ACLED’s Subnational Threat Tracker; the tool first warned of increased violence to come in the region in the past month.

Russian forces also continued to shell civilian infrastructure across the country. Attacks on civilian infrastructure in the Kharkiv region led to over a dozen civilian fatalities last week (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 6 April 2022; 9 April 2022). On 8 April, Russian troops fired two Tochka-U missiles at a railway station in Kramatorsk in the Donetsk region, where around 4,000 civilians were awaiting evacuation, killing 57 people and wounding over 100 (Ukrinform, 10 April 2022).

Demonstrations against the Russian military aggression continued in Ukraine last week, with Russian forces dispersing almost all protests held in occupied territories. In the Kherson and Zaporizhia regions, Russian forces used stun grenades and live gunfire against protesters, wounding several people (24 Channel, 3 April 2022; Ukraine Crisis, 3 April 2022). In Russia, demonstrations against the invasion continued at a smaller scale, as anti-war activists continued to face pressure and intimidation by the state. Demonstrations took place in a dozen cities, with police arresting over 200 demonstrators (Activatica, 2 April 2022; ODV-News, 13 April 2022). Several arrested protesters reported being tortured in a police department in Moscow (OVD-Info, 2 April 2022).

Moreover, unidentified pro-government groups carried out several attacks against anti-war activists last week. On a train from Moscow to Samara, unidentified assailants threw a mixture of red paint and acetone at Dmitry Muratov, a Nobel Peace Prize winner and editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta, an independent Russian newspaper (RFE/RL, 7 April 2022). Novaya Gazeta recently halted its reporting following growing state pressure on independent media (The Guardian, 28 March 2022).

Demonstrations in solidarity with Ukraine were also held in Armenia, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Finland, Georgia, Hungary, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Moldova, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Malta, Spain, and Switzerland. In Italy, unknown perpetrators targeted two villas on Lake Como belonging to a Russian television presenter and supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin. A fire broke out at one of the properties in what investigators believe is an arson attack (Unione Sarda, 6 April 2022), while the other was spray-painted with anti-war messages (La Repubblica, 6 April 2022).

General elections were held in Hungary and Serbia on 3 April, amid accusations of irregularities across both elections, as well as acts of violence in Serbia. In Serbia, the incumbent President Aleksandar Vucic was re-elected, despite his Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) being unable to secure sufficient votes to gain a majority in parliament (Reuters, 4 April 2022). Several incidents of violence against opposition representatives outside polling stations were reported in Belgrade. The leader of the Movement of Free Citizens party was attacked by SNS supporters after accusing them of using parallel voting lists to track voters (Danas, 3 April 2022). In Hungary, the Fidesz party of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán secured victory, winning 136 out of 199 seats in the parliamentary elections (Index.hu, 7 April 2022; Telex.hu, 4 April 2022). These results come amid allegations of media bias, opaque campaign funding, and control of state resources (EuroNews, 4 April 2022; Telex.hu, 2 April 2022). The OSCE stated that its monitoring missions observed irregularities in both Serbia and Hungary, citing the “absence of a level playing field” (RFE/RL, 4 April 2022).

Meanwhile, in France, violence continued in Corsica last week following the death of prominent Corsican militant separatist Yvan Colonna on 21 March, with demonstration activity recorded in several Corsican cities. Colonna’s death came several weeks after a jihadi prisoner attacked him in the prison of Arles in early March. In Canale-di-Verde, an explosive device partially destroyed the secondary home of a Parisian family. The action has not been claimed so far, but the phrase “For Yvan” was found graffitied on one of the walls (France3, 4 April 2022). Four bombings or attempted bombings targeting secondary homes have been recorded in Corsica since the beginning of 2022. Although these attacks have not been claimed, they come after two National Liberation Front of Corsica (FLNC) militant splinter groups reactivated in September 2021 (Corse Matin, 15 February 2022). While the FLNC — a militant group that advocated for a free Corsican state — ceased operations in June 2014, splinter groups have since committed violence in their name (France3, 23 June 2017; France3, 2 September 2021).

In Switzerland, police killed two people during an exchange of gunfire with the suspected abductor of the head of the Federal Commission for Vaccinations Christoph Berger last week. The alleged kidnapper was killed alongside an alleged accomplice. The man, who police had identified as a conspiracy theorist, reportedly kidnapped Berger on 31 March in an attempt to extract a ransom (Unione Sarda, 12 April 2022).

Source: Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project