The Herald Sun

Many Ukrainian prisoners of war show signs of trauma

- BY CARLOTTA GALL AND OLEKSANDR CHUBKO

The Ukrainian marine infantryma­n endured nine months of physical and psychologi­cal torture as a Russian prisoner of war, but was allotted only three months of rest and rehabilita­tion before being ordered back to his unit.

The infantryma­n, who asked to be identified only by his call sign, Smiley, returned to duty willingly. But it was only when he underwent intensive combat training in the weeks after that the depth and range of his injuries, both psychologi­cal and physical, began to surface.

“I started having flashbacks, and nightmares,” he said. “I would only sleep for two hours and wake up with my sleeping bag soaking wet.” He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and referred for psychologi­cal care, and is still receiving treatment.

Ukraine is just beginning to understand the lasting effects of the traumas its prisoners of war experience­d in Russian captivity, but it has been failing to treat them properly and returning them to duty too early, say former prisoners, officials and psychologi­sts familiar with individual cases.

Nearly 3,000 Ukrainian prisoners of war have been released from Russia in prisoner exchanges since the 2022 invasion began. More than 10,000 remain in Russian custoforme­r dy, some of whom have endured two years of conditions that a United Nations expert described as horrific.

The Ukrainian government’s rehabilita­tion program, which has usually involved two months in a sanitarium and a month at home, is inadequate, critics say, and the traumas suffered by Ukrainian prisoners are growing with the length and severity of the abuse they are being subjected to as the war drags on.

Russia’s torture of prisoners of war has been well documented by the United Nations, with former inmates speaking of relentless beatings, electric shocks, rape, sexual violence and mock executions, so much so that one expert described it as a systematic, state-endorsed policy. Many detainees have also reported lingering symptoms such as blackouts and fainting spells stemming from repeated blows to the head that were severe enough to cause concussion­s.

Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Andriy Kostin, said in September that “about 90% of Ukrainian prisoners of war have been subjected to torture, rape, threats of sexual violence or other forms of ill-treatment.”

The Russian military did not answer a request for comment on the allegation­s of mistreatme­nt of Ukrainian prisoners of war.

Ukrainian prosecutor­s have identified 3,000 military and civilian prisoners who can serve as witnesses for a case they are building for the Ukrainian courts to charge Russian individual­s and officials with mistreatme­nt of prisoners. The prosecutor­s encouraged two of the former prisoners to speak to The New York Times.

One of them was Smiley, 22, who was captured at the beginning of the war when the Russian navy seized Ukrainian positions on Snake Island in the Black Sea. He spoke a year after his release, saying he hoped that shedding light on the conditions of Russian prisons would help not only his own rehabilita­tion, but also the thousands of prisoners of war still in captivity.

“My sister persuaded me to give my first interview,” he said. “‘You need to tell,’ she said. Maybe if we speak, it will help the treatment of our guys.”

A second Ukrainian serviceman made available by the prosecutor­s gave a lengthy interview but declined to give his name or call sign because of the stigma surroundin­g the abuses he suffered.

The serviceman, 36, said he was taken prisoner along with several thousand soldiers and marines after a long siege at the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works in Mariupol in May 2022. He spent nine months in Russian captivity before being released in a prisoner exchange in early 2023.

He spent most of his time in three detention facilities in the Russian towns of Taganrog, Kamensk-shakhtinsk­y and Kursk. He returned critically underweigh­t and suffering from an injured spine and, like many others, blackouts, dizziness and ringing in the ears from frequent beatings on the head.

“I am not fainting any longer,” the serviceman said, “but I have difficulti­es with my back and concussion, and a squeezing all the time of the area around my heart.” Despite his injuries, he was ordered to return to light duty as a guard after only two months’ rest in a sanitarium.

The second serviceman said his interrogat­ors threatened to castrate him.

Interrogat­ors put him through a mock execution, firing a volley of gunfire beside him while he was blindfolde­d. They threatened him with rape, the serviceman said.

“I think they had such an order to break us psychologi­cally and physically so that we would not want anything else in life,” he said, adding that there were suicides in the Taganrog jail.

“You could hear the screams all day,” the serviceman said. “Impossible screams.” Sometimes during a lull, the prisoners could hear the voices of children playing outside, he said.

 ?? OLEKSII CHUMACHENK­O Sipa USA ?? A girl holds placard that reads, “Dad has been at war for 792 days already. How much more?” as she takes part in a rally Saturday in Kyiv, Ukraine, calling for changes to the terms of length of service in the army, being on the frontline and fair rotation.
OLEKSII CHUMACHENK­O Sipa USA A girl holds placard that reads, “Dad has been at war for 792 days already. How much more?” as she takes part in a rally Saturday in Kyiv, Ukraine, calling for changes to the terms of length of service in the army, being on the frontline and fair rotation.

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