Russian state media releases report outlining chilling plan to fully eliminate Ukraine

A Russian state-owned propaganda website has outlined a chilling plan to fully eliminate Ukraine.  

Russian state news agency RIA Novosti published an article titled "What should Russia do with Ukraine?"

The article outlines a detailed plan for the genocide of Ukraine and says "Ukraine must pay for its guilt". 

In the article, it calls almost every Ukrainian a Nazi who deserves death. 

"Nazis who took weapons must be killed in numbers as much as possible... Not just the elites, most of the people are guilty, they are passive Nazis, Nazi enablers. They supported these elites and must be punished," the report said. 

The report goes on to say "Ukraine must pay for its guilt towards Russia" and foresees economic and political destruction.

"It must be treated as an enemy, and therefore may develop only in dependency to Russia. No Marshall plan may happen. No neutrality both ideological or practical," the report said. 

The report says Ukraine is an "enemy" and can't exist as a national state. 

"History has proven Ukraine may not exist as a national state. Any attempt to create it leads to Nazism. Ukrainism is an artificial anti-Russian construct," the report said. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he has seen the report and views it as a piece of evidence for a future tribunal against Russian war criminals.

"On the same day, April 3, when the world was horrified to see the bodies of those killed in Bucha, an article justifying the genocide of Ukrainians was published on the website of the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti," Zelensky said, according to Ukrinform.

"Its name is quite eloquent, I quote: 'What should Russia do with Ukraine.' And it's not just text. This is one of the proofs for the future tribunal against Russian war criminals."

Shocking images have been published this week, which showed bodies strewn over the streets of the Ukrainian town of Bucha, which was until recently occupied by Russian forces.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said the reports raise "serious and disturbing questions about possible war crimes", US President Joe Biden said it is a "war crime", while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky described it as a "genocide". Russia has denied all accusations.

The United Nations said 11 million Ukrainians - more than a quarter of the population - have fled their homes while more than 4 million of those people have left Ukraine.