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220522 Digitic Photo: ScanpixPhoto: ScanpixPhotos from social media / Leonid FisyienkoVideos like these can help map war crimes in Ukraine.Photos from social media / Nikita DemenkovEvery day hundreds of videos from the war are shared on social media.Milena Marin is a of those who watch with. She is a digital war detective. From her office in peaceful London, she uses social media to gather evidence of war crimes for Amnesty International. But before the videos can prove anything, Milena Marin and her colleagues face a big piece of work. For example, after the Kyiv suburb of Borodjanka was bombed on March 2, where videos of these destructions emerged.Milena Marin compares videos from before, during and after the attack. The videos are compared with satellite footage. And data shows exactly where and when the videos were taken. Another video - recorded from a different angle but from the same roundabout - also shows the Russian tanks driving into the city. It's a war crime if soldiers go after civilians. So the recording smokes in the 360-degree video documentation Milena Marin makes. It shows what is happening in Borodjanka from the Russian soldiers driving into the city to the subsequent airstrikes. The material will be collected and stored so that it can be used in a future war crimes tribunal. It makes it harder for war criminals to get free. But how does Milena Marin ensure that the videos she collects are genuine? She tells it if you click on the link. Sister Novella (sno@dr.dk) Story by: Journalist Sara Pagh (sapa@dr.dk) and

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