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BBC: Ukrainian civilian freed after years in Russian captivity — his story is one of beatings, starvation, and survival

bbc ukrainian civilian freed after years russian captivity — story one beatings starvation survival journalist dmytro khyliuk spent three half 55612140-923b-11f0-a1c9-9feb11d8 since release prison has barely been off phone reports

Since his release from a Russian prison, Ukrainian journalist Dmytro Khyliuk has barely been off the phone. BBC reports that he spent three and a half years in Russian captivity after being detained in the first days of the full-scale invasion. He was freed last month in a prisoner swap, one of eight civilians released in a rare move by Moscow.

Since 2014, Russian forces have carried out systematic violations of international humanitarian law in Ukraine. These include deliberate attacks on civilian infrastructure, mass killings of non-combatants, forced deportations, and the use of prohibited chemical weapons. Prisoners of war have faced extensive abuse, with torture reported in 90–95% of cases, according to United Nations findings. At the same time, the true number of Ukrainian civilians held in illegal Russian captivity remains unknown.

Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, most exchanges between Russia and Ukraine have involved soldiers. The return of eight civilians, including Dmytro, came in a group of 146 Ukrainians. They did not disclose the exact terms of the deal, only that it included “people Russia was interested in.” One source told BBC that some of them were residents of Russia’s Kursk region, evacuated during Ukraine’s incursion in 2024.

Crowds gathered waving Ukrainian flags when the freed men returned, many of them emaciated from years behind bars. Stepping off the bus, Dmytro immediately phoned his mother to say he was finally free. His parents are elderly and unwell, and he had long feared never seeing them again.

A testimony of constant cruelty

Speaking to BBC after his release, Dmytro described brutal treatment in multiple Russian facilities.

They grabbed us and literally dragged us to the prison and on the way they beat us with rubber batons shouting things like, ‘How many people have you killed?’” he recalled.

Guards sometimes set dogs on prisoners.

“The cruelty was really shocking and it was constant,” he said.

He was never charged with a crime. In the first year, he endured starvation, losing more than 20 kg in a few months. He lost more than 20kg in the first few months. He also saw soldiers tortured with electric shocks during interrogations. The sounds of their pain and the bruises on their bodies left lasting impressions.

Captivity begins at home

The ordeal started in 2022 in Kozarovychi, his family’s village near Kyiv. As he and his father Vasyl checked damage to their home during Russia’s assault on the capital, troops detained them. Both men were bound, blindfolded, and held in a basement under warehouses used as a Russian base.

Vasyl was released, but Dmytro was transferred deeper into Russia. His parents later received just two scraps of paper from him. One note read, “I’m alive, I’m well. Everything’s ok.” For months, they feared the worst.

Families left waiting

BBC reports that more than 16,000 Ukrainian civilians remain missing. Officials have confirmed that only a fraction are in Russian prisons. Moscow does not publish lists. In Dmytro’s area alone, 43 men remain unaccounted for.

One of them is Volodymyr Loburets, detained at the same time as Dmytro. He has a new grandson he has never met. His wife Vira told BBC,

I had a husband – and now I don’t.

Vera holds a photo of her husband Volodymyr Loburets, who remains in Russian captivity. Photo: BBC
Vira holds a photo of her husband Volodymyr Loburets, who remains in Russian captivity. Photo: BBC

Families are frustrated because the Ukrainian government will not swap Russian soldiers for civilian hostages.

Ukraine’s impossible choices

Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets told BBC that dealing with Russia is like “playing chess with an opponent who stands up, pulls on boxing gloves and punches you.” Ukraine has no Russian civilian prisoners to trade, while sending soldiers back in return for civilians would trigger more abductions. Only one previous exchange involved Ukrainians accused of collaboration. It is unclear if that approach will be repeated.

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Home again, but changed forever

For Dmytro, the long wait is almost over. He is recovering in a Kyiv hospital before returning to his village. His mother Halyna can hardly mention his name without crying.

When Dima called, he told me to be calm, that I shouldn’t cry anymore. But we haven’t seen our son for three and a half years!” she said.

Staff of penal colony IK-10 in Mordovia, where Ukrainian POWs have been tortured. Illustration: InformNapalm.
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Back home, his house still bears shrapnel scars from Russia’s advance. He admits returning requires adjustment.

“So the trees are the same, the buildings are the same. But you understand this is a different country. You’re in a different reality,” he said.

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33 Russian guards, medics, commanders: InformNapalm links POW abuse in Mordovia to named Russian staff

Staff of penal colony IK-10 in Mordovia, where Ukrainian POWs have been tortured. Illustration: InformNapalm.

On 4 September, InformNapalm, a volunteer intelligence initiative focused on Russian aggression in Ukraine, published the personal data of 33 Russian prison staff reportedly involved in the torture of Ukrainian POWs at Mordovia’s IK-10. The exposé builds on survivor testimony broadcast by RFE/RL’s Skhemy.

Russia’s treatment of Ukrainian POWs amounts to systemic war crimes. Over 90% of released prisoners report torture—ranging from beatings and electrocution to sexual violence and psychological torment. These violations, along with executions of surrendering soldiers and illegal civilian trials, reflect a consistent pattern of abuse by Russian forces dating back to Russia’s initial invasion of Ukraine in 2014, including attacks on civilians, forced deportations, and the use of banned weapons.

According to InformNapalm, IK-10 has become a conveyor of abuse and repression since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion. The Mordovia-based colony reportedly held about 700 Ukrainian POWs as of April 2025. Just 177 have been released.

The rest remain in captivity, continuing to fight not only for freedom but for their lives,” InformNapalm wrote.

InformNapalm publishes 33 names of Russian prison staff tied to Ukrainian POW torture

A volunteer intelligence group investigating Russian war crimes has publicly identified 33 staff members of Russia’s notorious penal colony No. 10 (IK-10) in Mordovia. InformNapalm, which since 2014 has gathered open-source intelligence to expose war-related abuses, released names, ranks, addresses, contact information, social media profiles, and roles of individuals allegedly responsible for the torture and inhumane treatment of Ukrainian prisoners of war.

The release follows a 17 July 2025 investigation by the Ukrainian news program Skhemy (“Schemes”), a project of Radio Svoboda, which aired testimony from survivors held at IK-10.

Ukrainian POWs described brutal conditions: electric shocks, hours-long forced standing, sleep and food deprivation, and denial of medical care. Many did not even know where they were imprisoned until they were exchanged.
Russia’s IK-10 prison in Mordovia is about 600 km from Ukraine. Map: Google Maps

Inside a prison built to erase identity

Located in the settlement of Udarnyi, Zubovo-Polyansky district, IK-10 is operated as a special-regime facility. InformNapalm and “Schemes” both describe an atmosphere of total psychological suppression, where prisoners were routinely denied medical care, beaten, forced to stand for hours, and cut off from any knowledge of their whereabouts.

Guards and staff reportedly concealed their identities behind balaclavas and medical masks. Even the place of the facility was hidden from detainees. The goal, according to survivor accounts, was to strip POWs of identity and autonomy, reducing them to a state of helplessness under constant threat.

Reports of abuse at IK-10 go back to 2012–2014, but the colony’s role expanded after Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

InformNapalm now describes it as a systematized torture center where brutality was not random, but institutional, the researchers refer to the facility as a “conveyor of torture.”
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33 names, ranks, and faces behind the brutality

The list published by InformNapalm identifies a wide range of staff. At the top is Sergei Zabaiykin, who served as head of IK-10 from 2022 until March 2024 and is now deputy head of the FSIN directorate in Mordovia. FSIN is Russia’s federal authority for the prisons and detention of suspects and convicts. Inform Napalm cites a Russian publication describing Zabaikin as “a thieving head of the colony with a ‘beastly’ attitude toward inmates.”

Sergei Zabaikin’s data in the Inform Napalm article, including his post, rank, home address, social media profile, phone number, email, passport number, and the mentions of him, available on the web. Similar profiles are presented for all other described suspects.

His successor, Aleksandr Gnutov, served as deputy chief, then acting chief, and became official colony head in July 2024.

Other high-ranking figures named include multiple deputy heads: Aleksandr Pavlushkin, Aleksei Anashkin, Yegor Averkin, and Sergei Muymarov. InformNapalm says these individuals oversaw the daily operations during the peak periods of reported violence.

Medical personnel also figure prominently in the report. Field medic Ilya Sorokin—known by the nickname “Doctor Evil”—was named as a central figure. “Schemes” reported that Sorokin left his post at the end of 2024 and joined the Russian Defense Ministry, now operating under the call sign “Doctor” in military supply units. InformNapalm says he remains in contact with his former colleagues and continues to receive medical supplies for use in Russia’s war effort.

Chief physician Galina Mokshanova, her deputy Aleksandr Levin, and multiple other medics and nurses are named as having supported or enabled torture through medical neglect or complicity.

Not just jailers: engineers, psychologists, and guards

InformNapalm’s list includes more than command and medical staff. It also names psychologists, engineers, and guards believed to have played roles in the abuse. Senior psychologist Alesia Avdonina, for example, is described as a captain of internal service and also a part-time nail technician, showing the stark dissonance between professional responsibilities and daily online life.

Others identified include engineer Konstantin Anchin, psychologist Olga Khremkina, and senior inspector Anna Shcherbakova. InformNapalm notes that several individuals had no social media presence, while others shared openly under their real names.

Each individual entry includes date of birth, passport numbers, home address, phone contacts, and links to their online profiles. According to InformNapalm, the list will serve as both evidence for legal prosecution and a warning to other FSIN personnel.

Russia reacts with panic and suppression

Following the initial broadcast of “Schemes” in July, InformNapalm says insider sources reported increased activity from the Russian Investigative Committee and FSB. These agencies allegedly warned IK-10 staff about harsher penalties for information leaks and tried to prevent future exposures.

InformNapalm interprets this response as a sign that Russian authorities fear accountability. The group emphasized that “no mask will protect you” and called the release a first step toward identifying all individuals involved in war crimes inside Russia’s penitentiary system.

“Every new fact strengthens the chain of responsibility”

InformNapalm stresses that the publication of these 33 names is not the conclusion, but the beginning. The group is now encouraging anyone with further knowledge—especially former inmates or staff—to come forward with verified information.

The group seeks specific details: names or nicknames, job roles, periods of employment, specific incidents of abuse, supporting media, and contact information. All information will be carefully verified and sources anonymized when necessary.

InformNapalm warns against directly contacting any of the named individuals and urges caution for those living in temporarily occupied territories. Safe devices, VPNs, and page archiving are strongly recommended when submitting tips.

This publication is not the final point,” the report concludes. “It’s the foundation for further documentation. Every confirmation is a contribution to truth and justice.”

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Kherson’s mayor who survives dog attacks and mock executions, reveals how he stayed loyal to his homeland in Russian captivity

Former Kherson mayor Volodymyr Mykolaienko, released from Russian captivity on Ukraine’s Independence Day, on 24 August, in a 146-for-146 prisoner exchange, gave his first interview to MOST.

Ukrainian Armed Forces liberated the right-bank part of Kherson Oblast, including the city of Kherson, in the fall of 2022. Meanwhile, the left-bank area, located on the opposite side of the Dnipro River, remains temporarily occupied by Russian troops.

He recounted his abduction, torture, life in prisons, and how the occupiers tried to make him “governor” instead of Volodymyr Saldo, Russia’s collaborator. 

Former Kherson Mayor Volodymyr Mykolaienko before Russian captivity. Credit: Zmina

“You can take Saldo’s place”

Mykolaienko was kidnapped in 2022. He was held in Kherson for 16 days before being transferred via Crimea to Voronezh Oblast.

“The main goal was to force me to cooperate. Saldo wasn’t even the ‘governor’ yet. They said, ‘You can take this place,’” he recalled.

FSB officers tried to make him recognize the occupation authorities: “Well, haven’t changed your mind? If not — you’ll go to Sevastopol, reconsider in a month or two, and recognize the new government.” But Mykolaienko refused.

Torture and broken ribs

In detention, he suffered systematic beatings: “Broken ribs. They broke them three times: once on Good Friday, second on Pioneer Day, third when we were ‘settling in’ Pakino.”

“Shockers and batons, boards they beat with — that’s all their prosecutors and lawyers,” he said.

The first days of captivity were the worst: “Three times a day consistently: morning inspection, evening inspection, and during the day either a dog bites or you get beaten in the bath.”

“I fulfilled my family duty”

The occupiers staged a mock execution.

“They lined me up against the wall and said, ‘We’re going to execute you now.’ I said, ‘Go ahead.’ They asked if I was scared. I said, scared, don’t want to die, but I fulfilled my family duty — I have two grandchildren,” said Mykolaienko. 

 

One of the Russians started shooting into the wall but others stopped him. 

He and other prisoners lived in complete informational isolation. Only from new prisoners did they learn about Kherson’s liberation.

“I said in the cell: ‘Kherson is Ukrainian.’ Everyone cheered,” he recalled.

 

Guilt and gratitude

The politician admits he feels discomfort surviving while others remain captive: “You can try to console yourself however you want, but the discomfort is still there. You get exchanged, and the same people remain.”

At the same time, he acknowledges that in Russian captivity, he “didn’t know if I would survive another year there.”

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Russians captured him, cut his throat, and left Ukrainian POW to die. He survived and wants revenge for tortured comrades

Ukrainian soldier Vladyslav sits in his wheelchair at the hospital, communicating through written notes after Russian forces cut his throat during torture and left him in a pit with corpses of other killed Ukrainian fighters, thinking he was dead. The 33-year-old National Guard soldier survived and crawled for five days to safety.

Warning: This report contains information about violence and torture that some readers may find disturbing.

Vladyslav pressed fabric he tore from his clothing against his slashed throat and waited in a pit filled with seven dead and tortured Ukrainian soldiers. Russian forces had thrown him there to die after systematically mutilating his captured comrades—cutting off organs, gouging out eyes, severing ears and noses.

Five days later, he crawled into Ukrainian positions, maggots writhing in his wounds, having survived by drinking the blood of mice.

The 33-year-old National Guard soldier cannot speak now. He communicates by writing in a journal from his hospital bed in eastern Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, detailing his capture, torture, and escape. In one sentence that his brother reads aloud, Vladyslav says those who killed his comrades must pay and he is ready to return to fight.

Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne interviewed his family and medical staff about the ordeal. Hospital director Serhii Ryzhenko shared additional details on social media, calling it the most severe throat injury treated at the facility in 11 years of war.

Photo: Suspilne

From battlefield to torture chamber covered in blood

Several weeks ago, Vladyslav’s brigade lost control of their position near Pokrovsk during Russia’s major ground assault in Donetsk Oblast that began in early August.

The Russians aim to encircle the strategic city of Pokrovsk, making initial advances before Ukrainian defenders managed to cut apart their breakthrough. While Ukrainian forces have largely cleared their positions around Pokrovsk, the fighting continues amid broader diplomatic tensions.
President Trump met with Vladimir Putin and later with President Zelenskyy and European leaders, discussing ways to end the war. One of the voiced conditions was for Ukraine to surrender Donetsk Oblast in exchange for ceasefire guarantees, a proposal Ukrainian officials reject as it would eliminate their strongest defensive positions and leave the country vulnerable to future Russian attacks.

Vladyslav was trying to help trapped comrades when Russian forces captured him along with seven other Ukrainian fighters. When he was dragged into a basement, he saw lots of blood.

Two Russian captors, different from the ones who brought him, were released convicts. They systematically tortured each prisoner. He was eighth in line. Other were already standing on their knees, with their hands tied up.

“The first reconnaissance boys who were captured had their eyes gouged out, lips cut off, male organs cut off, ears, and nose,” his brother Yevhen told Suspilne, reading what Vladyslav wrote in the journal.

Vladyslav watched seven soldiers die before his turn came. The Russians cut his throat and dumped him into the pit with the others, believing he was dead.

Russia has been recruiting prisoners from penal colonies to serve at the front lines, offering them military service instead of a prison cell to replenish high losses in the fourth year of war. They are often sent into extremely dangerous combat situations, becoming “cannon fodder” or “meat grinders.” 
Vladyslav in his National Guard uniform before his capture near Pokrovsk. The 33-year-old soldier was trying to help trapped comrades when Russian forces captured him along with seven other Ukrainian fighters in August. Photos: courtesy of family

Playing dead under garbage and debris saved his life

Vladyslav had managed to compress his throat wound and tear fabric from his underwear for a makeshift bandage. The Russians threw garbage over the pit to hide the bodies. Among the debris: a broken bottle.

“His hands were tied, and so he was able to cut the rope with that bottle,” his wife Victoriia explained.

He waited until the Russians left, then began crawling toward Ukrainian lines.

The journey took nearly five days. Maggots infested his wounds. Desperate thirst forced him to catch mice.

“He had to tear apart mice and drink their blood,” hospital director said.

Long recovery ahead

Ukrainian forces evacuated Vladyslav on 17 August. He arrived at Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Clinical Hospital with massive blood loss and infected wounds that had begun to rot.

“When they cut someone’s throat, when a person is bleeding out—there’s little chance,” doctor Ryzhenko said.

“He held on to the end, but what distinguished him was that he was confident until the end that everything would be fine,” the director added, highlighting Vladyslav’s determination to live and get better.

Surgeons performed emergency surgery and installed a tracheostomy. Now the medical team plans reconstructive procedures to restore his voice.

He wants revenge for tortured and killed comrades

As Vladyslav recovers, his brother and wife provide constant support at his bedside. He thinks often of his 4-year-old daughter, who doesn’t know the full story yet but waits to see her father.

“She’s restless, just like him,” Victoriia said, noting their resemblance.

Vladyslav holds up a photo of his 4-year-old daughter during his interview with Suspilne at the hospital. Despite his ordeal and ongoing medical treatment, his primary motivation is reuniting with his daughter, who his wife says resembles him and shares his restless nature. Photo: Suspilne

But alongside thoughts of reunion, another force drives him: the memory of seven dead comrades and a burning desire to return to combat.

His brother Yevhen shared what the soldier wrote in his journal: “Those beasts should all feel what I felt and those seven of our Cossack boys.”

Ukrainian prosecutors have documented 273 executions of Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) by Russian forces since the 2022 full-scale invasion, with another 184 bodies of Ukrainians who died in Russian captivity retrieved by Ukraine through late 2024.

The numbers suggest systematic abuse rather than isolated incidents, supported by public statements from Russian officials explicitly calling for cruelty toward captured Ukrainians.

International observers note a sharp increase in such cases during 2024, with the pattern of executions and torture deaths constituting war crimes under international humanitarian law.
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Russia eliminates monitoring of facilities where beatings, electrocution becomes standard practice against Ukrainian POWs

Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights Dmytro Lubinets commented on Russia’s intention to withdraw from the European Convention for the Prevention of Torture. He stressed that such a move demonstrates the Kremlin’s disregard for human rights and paves the way for even greater crimes against Ukrainians.

Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) are systematically tortured in Russian captivity and denied medical care. More than 95% of released Ukrainian POWs report experiencing torture, including beatings, electrocution, sexual violence, and psychological abuse.

Russia leaves the convention: what it means

Recently, Moscow has announced its withdrawal from the European Torture Convention, which not only prohibits torture but also provides for monitoring of places of detention. Previously, this was carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture.

According to Lubinets, this decision has several dangerous consequences:

  • avoiding international monitoring of torture in prisons and in temporarily occupied territories;
  • the loss of legal and judicial mechanisms of pressure on Russia;
  • the effective removal of responsibility before the Council of Europe.

“The aggressor state shows that it does not care about human rights and no longer recognizes European norms,” the Ukrainian ombudsman stated.

Threat of mass human rights violations

Russia, which for years has carried out arbitrary detentions, torture, and violence against prisoners of war and civilians, is now officially refusing even its formal international obligations.

Ukrainian journalist abducted from his garden in 2022 returns from Russian captivity weighing less than 45 kg

Lubinets stressed that impunity only breeds new crimes and creates a threat to the global rule of law.

“Such actions by Russia create risks of widespread human rights violations, especially during armed conflicts,” he noted.

What the world must do

Despite Russia’s withdrawal, other international mechanisms remain. Lubinets emphasized the importance of:

  • using the UN Convention against Torture;
  • cooperating with the International Committee of the Red Cross;
  • documenting Russia’s crimes and transferring them to the International Criminal Court;
  • imposing sanctions against those involved in torture.

“Torture is part of Russia’s state policy,” Lubinets concluded.

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'Torture was not just cruel, it was inhuman' — Ukrainian soldier dies weeks after release from Russian captivity

'Torture was not just cruel, it was inhuman' — Ukrainian soldier dies weeks after release from Russian captivity

Less than a month after his release from Russian captivity, 57-year-old soldier Valery Zelensky died of injuries sustained under torture, Ukrainian media outlet Suspilne reported on July 6.

Zelensky had spent 39 months in Russian captivity. He was released as part of the landmark 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner deal on May 25. Just 22 days later, on June 16, his heart stopped.

At the beginning of the full-scale invasion, his unit delivered weapons to Ukrainian forces in Mariupol, his daughter, Valeria Zelenka, said.

"When the offensive began, they were told that volunteers were needed to go on the assault. Out of 40 (people), eight said, 'We're going.' My father was one of them," she added.

The family did not immediately find out that he had been taken prisoner for some time, and he was considered missing in action. During his years in captivity, Zelensky's family received only one letter. He had long appeared on prisoner exchange lists but did not return until this year.

"The torture was not just cruel, it was inhuman. But he endured it," his daughter told Suspilne.

"He told me, 'Daughter, I endured it because of Kyokushin (a style of karate). I have discipline, I'm tough. My body and muscles protected me.'"

Valeria said her father had been overjoyed to come home and meet his grandson for the first time. He also expressed a desire to learn Ukrainian after years of speaking Russian.

Doctors initially treated him for suspected pancreatic issues, but his condition quickly deteriorated. During surgery, they discovered his organs were severely damaged. He died in intensive care days later.

"My father told me, 'Three people died among us from torture. And when I was in a very bad state, I asked God: Please let me see the eyes of my beloved,'" his daughter said.

A medical report listed extensive injuries. He had a non-functioning shoulder and arm and showed signs of multiple organ failures.

"The first feeling is inexhaustible pain that your loved one is no longer here. He was simply tortured," Valeria said. "And there is relief that he no longer feels that torture."

Zelensky's return was part of a wider prisoner exchange agreed during a first round of direct talks between Ukrainian and Russian delegations in Istanbul.

The case is the latest in a number of Ukrainian soldiers' deaths after their return from Russian captivity, highlighting the effects of "widespread and systematic" torture of prisoners of war (POWs) in Russian prisons, reported by the U.N.

Serhii Dobrovolskyi, a Ukrainian soldier who had been in Russian captivity since 2023, died just a month after his release at the end of May as part of a 1000-for-1000 prisoner swap, an official from the soldier's home region announced on June 21.

In 2023, a high-ranking officer from the "Azov" brigade, Oleh Mudrak, died at 35 years old, months after his release from Russian captivity.

As a POW, he survived the Olenivka camp explosion and endured a dramatic weight loss in just 100 days, as seen in the photos published by Stanislav Aseyev, a Ukrainian writer and activist.

Dmytro Shapovalov, a 32-year-old defender of Ukraine who was exchanged in 2023 after over a year in Russian prisons, died on June 9, according to Suspilne.

Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) held in Russian captivity often face torture, abuse, and inhumane treatment, according to Ukrainian officials and human rights groups.

Many former POWs have reported beatings, starvation, and psychological pressure.

The exact number of Ukrainians currently held by Russia remains unknown. Kyiv continues to call for a full all-for-all exchange. Moscow has repeatedly rejected the offer.

‘Beyond cynical’ – Russian doctor carved ‘Glory to Russia’ scar on POW during operation, Ukraine says
After more than three years of Russia’s full-scale invasion, each new revelation of cruel treatment of Ukrainians in Russian captivity hardly surprises anyone. But when a photo recently emerged online, showing a “Glory to Russia” scar on the body of a Ukrainian prisoner of war (POW), it sent shockwaves
'Torture was not just cruel, it was inhuman' — Ukrainian soldier dies weeks after release from Russian captivityThe Kyiv IndependentDaria Shulzhenko
'Torture was not just cruel, it was inhuman' — Ukrainian soldier dies weeks after release from Russian captivity
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Former Ukrainian POW dies month after being released from Russian captivity

Former Ukrainian POW dies month after being released from Russian captivity

Serhii Dobrovolskyi, a Ukrainian soldier who had been in Russian captivity since 2023, has died just a month after his release at the end of May as part of a 1000-for-1000 prisoner swap, an official from the soldier's home region announced on June 21.

The case is the latest in a chain of Ukrainian soldiers' unexpected deaths after their return from Russian captivity, highlighting the effects of "widespread and systematic" torture of prisoners of war (POWs) in Russian prisons, reported by the U.N.

"Serhii Dobrovolskyi was released from captivity at the end of May this year. A few days ago, he was met by his fellow townspeople in his hometown," wrote the head of the soldier's native Zdolbuniv district in Rivne Oblast, Vladyslav Sukhliak, on Facebook. The exact cause of death was not immediately announced.

A video posted by the Zdolbuniv city council on June 17 shows Dobrovolskyi being greeted in Zdolbuniv by a crowd chanting the Ukrainian anthem as the soldier is hugging his mother. He was also presented with a korovai, a round bread loaf, as part of the symbolic Ukrainian tradition of welcome with bread and salt.

"Finally, after almost two years, the mother hugged her son," the Zdolbuniv city council commented on the video.

Sukhliak added that Dobrovolskyi was 43 years old at the time of death.  "The war with the damned (Russian) occupiers takes lives and health of the defenders," he wrote.

Earlier in June, another Ukrainian soldier returned from Russian captivity had died unexpectedly.

Dmytro Shapovalov, a 32-year-old defender of Ukraine who was exchanged in 2023 after over a year in Russian prisons, had died on June 9, according to the Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne.

His sister Anastasiia said that Shapovalov endured torture, hunger, and psychological pressure in captivity. After his release, Shapovalov returned to military service. He died in his sleep, presumably from heart failure, Suspilne reports.

After his death, a representative of the Coordination Headquarters managing the prisoner swaps, Yuliia Pavliuk, published a video showing Shapovalov eating an apple on the day of his release.

"I had just been dreaming about an apple for a year," Shapovalov says in the video.

In 2023, a high-ranking officer from the "Azov" brigade, Oleh Mudrak, died at 35 years old, months after his release from Russian captivity. As a POW, he survived the Olenivka camp explosion and endured a dramatic weight loss in just 100 days, as seen in the photos published by Stanislav Aseyev, a Ukrainian writer and activist.

Treatment of "Azov" fighters in Russian prisons is notoriously brutal due to their nationalistic values and Russian propaganda that worked for years to smear the unit's reputation both in Russia and internationally.

Some Azov fighters died from torture in Russian captivity or were sentenced to decades in prison for alleged war crimes. Many of them were among the 54 Ukrainian prisoners killed in an explosion in Olenivka penal colony in the Russian-occupied part of Donetsk Oblast on July 28, 2022.

Ukraine accused Russia of orchestrating the explosion, while Russia has been systematically preventing international organizations from conducting an independent investigation on the site of the attack.

The U.N. reported widespread torture of Ukrainian POWs in Russia and brutal conditions of their detention over the past years.

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Former Ukrainian POW dies month after being released from Russian captivityThe Kyiv IndependentTim Zadorozhnyy
Former Ukrainian POW dies month after being released from Russian captivity
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