Greenwich Time

Ukrainian women to share stories of torture in Russia

Two will discuss their prison experience­s on Monday

- By Sally Bahner

BRANFORD — Lyudmila Huseynova and Anna Olsen will tell their harrowing story of when they both experience­d torture in Russian prisons as a result of their activism in Ukraine.

Ukrainian journalist and Branford resident Iryna Solomko Bonenberge­r will lead a conversati­on with these two former Ukrainian female Russian prisoners at 6 p.m. Monday, March 6, in the Blackstone Library Auditorium, 758 Main St.

Huseynova and Olsen are visiting the U.S. for three weeks as part of Media Initiative for Human Rights, which organized and sponsored this advocacy trip. They spoke at Yale University and will participat­e in events at the United Nations, New York City Bar, the Metropolit­an Opera, Ukrainian Institute of America; they will meet with UN and US government officials.

Huseynova is a resident of the temporaril­y occupied Novoazovsk region of Donetsk region. She cared for orphans and semi-orphans from the temporaril­y occupied village of Primorske.

In the territory controlled by Ukraine, she collected children’s clothes and shoes, bought school supplies, vitamins, candies, and books.

She was detained on Oct. 9, 2019. She was detained due to volunteeri­ng, a pro-Ukrainian position (a blue-yellow flag hung over her house in Novoazovsk for a long time), and her social media activity. She was imprisoned for three years although “the courts” never

delivered an actual sentence.

Anna Olsen is a senior combat medic of the chemical and biological protection company of the 36th separate brigade of marines. She was at the Ilyich factory in Mariupol, was captured and spent six months in captivity.

She said she went through physical and psychologi­cal torture, stating that the Russian officers who tortured her “behaved like animals.” Olsen was released along with other prisoners on Oct. 17, 2022.

Solomko Bonenberge­r, an award-winning Ukrainian journalist, newlyminte­d U.S. citizen, and now correspond­ent for

Ukrainian Service of Voice ofA merica, and her husband Adrian Bonenberge­r, a Branford native, journalist, and veteran, traveled to Ukraine at the beginning of the war.

Despite the danger, Solomko Bonenberge­r’s parents have remained in Ukraine, like many citizens.

In addition to her journalism resume, Solomko Bonenberge­r is a documentar­ian, and pro-democracy advocate. Her work has appeared in numerous Ukrainian publicatio­ns and broadcast networks for 20 years. She covered the most recent “Euromaidan” revolution as well as the war in Ukraine’s east.

A year ago, Branford residents stood in solidarity on the steps of the Blackstone Library in support of Ukraine as Russia began its assault. What was expected to be a quick undertakin­g has turned into persistenc­e and endurance on the part of the Ukrainian people. The event on March 6 will also mark Internatio­nal Women’s Day, which is March 8.

The Women’s Political Salon, a group of local women who meet periodical­ly to discuss current events, will host the event. Refreshmen­ts will be served.

For more informatio­n, email sebahner@snet. net.or wbubriski@gmail. com.

 ?? Betsy McMahon/Contribute­d photo ?? Branford residents “stand with Ukraine” last year on the steps of Blackstone Library, lit up in Ukraine’s national colors.
Betsy McMahon/Contribute­d photo Branford residents “stand with Ukraine” last year on the steps of Blackstone Library, lit up in Ukraine’s national colors.

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