SBU accuses 3 Russian proxies of torture during occupation of Mykolaiv.

Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) reported[1] on May 10 that it identified three individuals from Russian-occupied Donetsk Oblast who set up a torture chamber during the occupation of Mykolaiv Oblast. According to the SBU, the three individuals joined Russian proxies in Donetsk Oblast prior to the start of the full-scale invasion[2]. One of the three men was a commander, while the other two were his subordinates.

He had reportedly been appointed to control a village in Mykolaiv Oblast's Bashtanskyi District during Russia's occupation of the region. Under his orders, Russian soldiers kidnapped local residents and subjected them to "numerous kinds of" torture[3]. Four residents of the village were detained, including former servicemembers[4] of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

On the orders of the commander, soldiers "locked the victims in a cold utility room and cellar without access to fresh air," the SBU wrote. The prisoners were also "brutally beaten and kept for a long time in unsanitary conditions, without water and food." According to the SBU, Russian forces were trying to obtain information about the locations of Ukrainian military bases.

Waterboarding, electrocution and a kidnapped son: Ex-general tells of torture in Kherson

Editor's Note: This story contains descriptions that some readers may find graphic. Standing in line in liberated Kherson for a box of pasta and canned goods with a handsome black dog on a lead, Valerii Hnedov doesn't look like someone who only three weeks prior was languishing in a

[5] The Kyiv Independent news desk

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References

  1. ^ reported (t.me)
  2. ^ full-scale invasion (kyivindependent.com)
  3. ^ torture (kyivindependent.com)
  4. ^ former servicemembers (kyivindependent.com)
  5. ^ Waterboarding, electrocution and a kidnapped son: Ex-general tells of torture in KhersonEditor's Note: This story contains descriptions that some readers may find graphic.

    Standing in line in liberated Kherson for a box of pasta and canned goods with a handsome black dog on a lead, Valerii Hnedov doesn't look like someone who only three weeks prior was languishing in a (kyivindependent.com)