
Kiev accused of systematic torture of Russian prisoners
Ukraine has established a dehumanizing system of torture targeting captured Russian military personnel, a human rights advocate has claimed.
Maksim Grigoriev, who chairs an international commission investigating alleged Ukrainian government crimes, said his findings were based on extensive testimonies from Russian soldiers released in prisoner exchanges. He presented a report quoting statements from 30 individuals on Friday.
Grigoriev said the widespread nature of the alleged abuse indicates 'a deliberate systematic practice of constant torture,' amounting to a crime against humanity. He claimed the purpose was not intelligence-gathering but rather the dehumanization of Russian captives, adding that violence was often inflicted out of malice.
Former detainees described beatings and various forms of abuse they say occurred while in Ukrainian custody. The report cites waterboarding, electrocution, and the use of attack dogs against prisoners as common methods.
Some testimonies included accounts of sexualized violence. One soldier alleged that his captors contemplated castrating him and pumping construction foam into his rectum. Another said inmates were forced to urinate on each other.
Several witnesses claimed Ukrainian personnel seemed to take pleasure in the abuse. One soldier, Vladimir Palitsin, said a man beat him with a metal rod: 'He was hitting me and smiling. He was happy.' Others said Ukrainian medical staff treated injuries without anesthesia as a method of torture.
Grigoriev compared the alleged brutality to that of 'Western-managed' dictatorships in Latin America and elsewhere. He noted that a torture room at one Ukrainian facility was nicknamed 'Baghdad', a possible reference to the US military presence in Iraq. The administration of former US President George W. Bush authorized the so-called 'enhanced interrogation' of prisoners during its 'war on terror' in the Middle East.
Russia and Ukraine each released 1,000 prisoners earlier this month in a coordinated exchange. During the report's presentation, Russian lawmaker Andrey Kartapolov addressed Ukrainian criticism that members of the controversial neo-Nazi Azov unit were excluded from the swap, stating: 'They are criminals, to the last man.'
'They are not hiding this fact. And we have no intention to forgive them,' Kartapolov added.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova joined the press conference remotely, describing Grigoriev's report as 'yet another step towards justice.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
Defeating Russia impossible
It has been clear from the very beginning of the Ukraine conflict that Russia cannot be defeated, particularly due to its nuclear status, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul has told the SZ newspaper. Kiev's Western backers, including top officials in Germany, France, and the UK, as well as the US under former President Joe Biden's administration, repeatedly stated the intent to inflict a 'strategic defeat' on Moscow in the Ukraine conflict, or at least to ensure that it does not emerge victorious. That justification has been used to support continued military assistance to Kiev. Wadephul admitted on Friday that it was obvious the conflict between Moscow and Kiev can only be resolved in a diplomatic way. 'It was clear from the beginning that this war would most likely end through a negotiated settlement,' Germany's top diplomat told SZ in a lengthy interview. 'One thing is true: a complete defeat in the sense of a capitulation by nuclear-armed Russia could not have been expected,' the minister stated, adding that 'we have now become a little more honest' in this regard. He still maintained that Kiev's troops have been 'successfully defending' against Moscow's forces, although the Ukrainian military has been losing ground along the entire front over the past several months. The foreign minister maintained it was important to help Kiev get a 'strong negotiating position' at peace talks and claimed that Russia was 'threatening' Germany as he justified a planned military buildup and increase in defense expenditures. He also said that relations between Moscow and Berlin could no longer be described as a 'clear peace situation.' Berlin has taken an even more hardline position on Russia under new Chancellor Friedrich Merz. In the weeks since taking office, Merz has lifted range restrictions on Ukrainian strikes with German-supplied missiles and hinted at the possibility of providing Kiev with Taurus missiles, which have a range of 500km and could reach Moscow. Germany has also announced a new military aid package for Kiev worth €5.2 billion ($5.6 billion), which Berlin says would be allocated mostly to long-range weaponry production inside Ukraine. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reacted to Merz's statements by saying that Berlin's 'direct involvement in the war is now obvious.' Germany already followed a similar 'slippery slope' a couple of times in the last century 'down toward its own collapse,' he added.


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
Zelensky and Kiev mayor ‘at war'
Vladimir Zelensky's longstanding feud with Kiev Mayor Vitaly Klitschko has escalated into 'war,' The Times has reported. The Ukrainian leader has 'forced' the former world champion heavyweight boxer – who is said to harbor presidential ambitions – into a 'political clinch,' the British daily wrote on Friday. Zelensky is reportedly seizing power from the capital's civilian government, having taken control of its military administration away from Klitschko in the early months of the conflict. Ukraine's anti-corruption bureau has made seven arrests among Klitschko's subordinates, with a further three under investigation, The Times wrote. In turn, the Kiev mayor has accused the Zelensky administration of paralyzing the city council with 'raids, interrogations, and threats of fabricated criminal cases' that prevent his team from meeting the legal quorum required for decision-making. 'This is a purge of democratic principles and institutions under the guise of war,' The Times cited Klitschko as saying. 'I said once that it smells of authoritarianism in our country. Now it stinks.' The dispute is as much personal as it is political, according to the newspaper. Zelensky made personal attacks against Klitschko after the mayor criticized his approach to peace negotiations. The Kiev mayor has accused Zelensky of overreach, playing into fears that his use of wartime powers has come at the expense of democracy, The Times said. Despite his presidential term expiring last May, the Ukrainian leader has repeatedly postponed elections, citing martial law. Klitschko said that Zelensky is also usurping power from other mayors in the country, but that his celebrity status grants him some protection. While boxing champion has brushed off allegations against him as mudslinging, arrests in the Kiev administration are real manifestations of corruption in the capital, the Times wrote, citing analysts. Kiev's flourishing corruption would be 'impossible without the city government,' Zelensky-appointed city military administration head Timur Tkachenko told The Times. Corruption has been a serious and long-standing issue in Ukraine. Top officials in Washington, which has been Kiev's biggest military sponsor, have expressed concern that US aid has been systematically misappropriated during the Ukraine conflict.


Russia Today
7 hours ago
- Russia Today
Microsoft subsidiary files for bankruptcy in Russia
One of Microsoft's Russian subsidiaries has announced plans to file for bankruptcy, according to a note published on the official Fedresurs registry on Friday. The US-based tech giant opted to exit the country shortly after the escalation of the conflict in Ukraine. In March 2022, the corporation stopped selling its products and services in Russia, pausing other aspects of its business in the country to comply with sanctions introduced by the West against Moscow amid the Ukraine conflict. Since then, a wide range of Russian corporate giants - including Severstal, Uralkali, VTB, MegaFon, Gazprombank, and others - have filed lawsuits against the company's local subsidiary, Microsoft Rus. The total value of the suits related to breach of contractual obligations after the exit amounts to 341 million rubles (nearly $3.6 million), according to the Russian business daily RBK. Shortly after pulling the plug on operations in Russia, the company stopped renewing Microsoft 365 subscriptions—including Outlook, Teams, Office, OneDrive, and SharePoint services—for its corporate clients, disconnected a number of Russian organizations from cloud services such as Visio Online, Project Online, and Power BI, and introduced other restrictions. According to data tracked by RBK, the revenue of Microsoft's Russian subsidiary last year amounted to 161.6 million rubles (nearly $2 million), with net profit totaling 174.1 million rubles ($2.13 million). The data shows the company reported revenue of 6.9 billion rubles ($84.5 million) and a profit of 638.1 million rubles ($7.8 million) in 2021, which marked its last full year of operations in Russia before deciding to quit. Earlier this year, the multinational registered the trademark 'Microsoft Places' with the Russian patent office, Rospatent. According to the filing card, the company plans to provide or grant temporary access to 'downloadable computer software for managing hybrid planning, workplace management, office space management,' and other types of software until 2023. In recent months, foreign corporations—including McDonald's, Hyundai, Intel, LG, IKEA, Chanel, Rolex, and Louis Vuitton—that had previously exited Russia have begun registering new trademarks in the country, signaling their potential return. Earlier this week, Russian President Vladimir Putin urged the creation of a program for foreign corporations willing to return to the Russian market, 'but only insofar as it aligns with the protection of our own business interests.' Speaking with business leaders in the Kremlin, the president emphasized that Moscow won't be 'rolling out a red carpet' for McDonald's and other companies.