The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Mariupol girl narrowly avoids brutal interrogat­ion

- By Hiromi Uechi

LVIV, Ukraine — Maria Vdovichenk­o narrowly avoided a brutal interrogat­ion by the Russian military at a “screening detention center” as the 17-year-old and her family ed one month ago from Mariupol, which is still under Russian attack.

Harshly questioned and beaten, her father lost his sight in one eye.

“I couldn’t stop shaking with fear,” said Vdovichenk­o, who is currently living outside Ukraine, during an online interview with e Yomiuri Shimbun.

Vdovichenk­o le Mariupol with her father, mother and younger sister. Traveling in a car driven by her father, they went to Yalta, a small town under the control of pro-Russian armed groups that has the same name as a famous resort in Crimea.

As they were about to leave Yalta, their car was stopped and directed by pro-Russian armed forces to a place where nearly 500 vehicles were lined up in front of a simple barracks building.

Vdovichenk­o’s family spent two full days in the car, and they were not allowed to get out. When their turn came, Vdovichenk­o and her father were taken to the detention center. Only people age 14 or older were being interrogat­ed, so her sister and sickly mother were not questioned.

While being taken to an interrogat­ion room, Vdovichenk­o overheard a soldier say, “I shot and killed more than 10 people who couldn’t pass the screening process.”

Vdovichenk­o saw a truck outside the building with many people on it. In hindsight, she thinks they may have failed the screening.

“I don’t know where they were taken. ere were too many people to count in the back of the truck,” she said.

In the interrogat­ion room, Vdovichenk­o and her father’s passports and cell phone data were examined.

eir ngerprints were also taken.

“I was panicking and tried very hard to suppress my desire to scream,” Vdovichenk­o said. She could not stop shaking, so the soldiers had to retake her ngerprints several times.

ey showed no particular interest in Vdovichenk­o, saying that she had “too much of a baby face.” She was allowed to return to her family’s car a er about 20 minutes.

“If they liked me, I’d have been sexually assaulted and tortured to death,” Vdovichenk­o said.

Her father was subjected to relentless, harsh interrogat­ion. To determine whether he was hostile, he was repeatedly asked things like what he thought of Russia, what activities he was involved in, and what he thought about the war.

When it was discovered that he had erased the data on his cell phone, soldiers yelled at him, “Why is there no data?” and hit him hard on the back of the head. When he regained consciousn­ess, he had been le on a street and the blow to his head had cost him the sight in one of his eyes.

e family then ed to Berdyansk, west of Yalta, bearing documents that showed they had passed the screening process. A er that, they went to the Ukrainian-controlled city of Zaporizhzh­ia.

Vdovichenk­o said: “My father kept the car going even though his vision was extremely bad. anks to him, our whole family survived.”

For safety reasons, Vdovichenk­o did not reveal her current location.

“Russia destroyed the city where I was born, raised and experience­d my rst love,” she said. “It’s my mission to tell people about this despicable act.” (May 6)

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