![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() They've taken that to Ukraine but it's throughout the country.Īnd this man - a survivor of a machete attack in Rwanda. James Nachtwey: The part that was inhabited by the Chechens was pounded into rubble from artillery, and rocket fire, and air strikes for weeks and weeks on end, with the civilian population trapped inside. Nachtwey was in Chechnya's capital Grozny for weeks in 1995 and '96, as Russian forces relentlessly bombarded the city… James Nachtwey looking at a photo on his computer James Nachtwey: Somehow the Russians have stood apart, and not only in Ukraine, but in Chechnya. It was really, like, kind of butchery.Īnderson Cooper: In terms of brutality, of all the militaries you have seen does the Russian military stand apart in Ukraine for their behavior? These are images he took in Bucha shortly after Russian troops pulled out, leaving behind the bodies of civilians they'd executed. In Ukraine at the start of the war Nachtwey worked in and around Kyiv and Kharkiv for the New Yorker magazine. Because in a way you're, you might be fighting for peace or fighting against an injustice and the way you do it is by informing people about it, with the faith that people will want something done about it. James Nachtwey: I think it's a way of looking at it. ![]()
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