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Ukraine: Documenting Russian Abuse and Torture Cases

Ukraine: Documenting Russian Abuse and Torture Cases

Howard LaFranchi
2026-01-20 10:27:00

The conditions Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr Kovalchuk experienced at the hands of his Russian captors were bad enough when he was first taken prisoner in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine in April 2022.

But then the Russians discovered that the sexagenarian was born in Russia and had served in the Soviet Army. That made him not just a “dirty Ukrainian,” in their eyes, but a traitor to Mother Russia.

“That’s when the adventures began,” says Mr. Kovalchuk (not his real surname), relating the swift deterioration in physical and psychological conditions he was subjected to once he was deemed a turncoat.

Why We Wrote This

Ukraine is investigating hundreds of thousands of cases of Russian war crimes and crimes against humanity – despite a backdrop of growing impunity in the international arena.

What had been occasional beatings became more frequent at the Russian prison where he was held. A much-anticipated daily exposure to fresh air turned into a traumatic encounter with vicious attack dogs.

“They beat me with billy clubs until my arms were black,” he says in an expressionless voice. “They put electric wires under my nails and shocked me while yelling ‘Traitor!’”

A single daily meal deteriorated further, often to a wretched broth made of rotten vegetables.

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