NewsTortured Ukrainian soldier returned home after brutal Russian captivity

Tortured Ukrainian soldier returned home after brutal Russian captivity

The Russians captured Oleksandr Hrytsiuk from Kivertsi in Volyn in April 2022. In January 2024, his family was informed that his body had been returned from captivity. "The head was entirely blue, the nose was to the side, and the index fingers had no nails. There were signs of torture all over the body," says Hrytsiuk's wife. The soldier did not want to speak Russian.

On the left: Oleksandr Hrycyuk. On the right: the other prisoners of war
On the left: Oleksandr Hrycyuk. On the right: the other prisoners of war
Images source: © Texty.org.ua

10:36 AM EDT, June 30, 2024

Oleksandr was a powerful man. He weighed 243 pounds and was in good physical condition. He was 5 feet 11 inches tall. When his body returned from Russian captivity, he weighed only 110 pounds. The Russians had tortured him for several months.

Because he did not want to speak Russian

"The head was entirely blue, the nose to the side, and the index fingers had no nails. There were signs of torture all over the body," said the sad wife of Oleksandr, who had to identify the body of her beloved husband.

Fellow prisoners of the tortured soldier later told the woman that the Russians continuously beat Hrytsiuk, either in the cell or taking him outside, because he did not want to speak Russian.

It was from Russian websites that Hrytsiuk's wife learned that he was in captivity. On April 10, 2022, along with a group of soldiers, Oleksandr was captured near Novobakhmutivka in the Donetsk region in Ukraine. The wife received only one message from Oleksandr, which was allegedly written by Oleksandr in Russian.

Hello my wife. I am in captivity in the Russian Federation. I was injured. They are feeding and clothing me. Providing all necessary medical care. Awaiting exchange and quick return home.

At the beginning of January 2024, Oleksandr's wife received information from another prisoner that her husband had been molested. "And already on January 24, an investigator from Kyiv called me and said that in December 2023, there was an exchange of bodies and they have the body of my husband," she admitted.

Prisoner exchange. Among the released were civilians

The last prisoner exchange between Kyiv and Moscow took place on June 26. It occurred for the first time with the participation of representatives of the Russian ombudsman’s office, the Ukrainian Ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets reported on Wednesday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky informed on Tuesday evening on Telegram that another prisoner exchange with the Russian Federation, carried out through the United Arab Emirates, led to the return of 90 citizens to their homeland.

Meanwhile, on Saturday, Zelensky informed that among those exchanged were also ten civilians.

"We managed to bring back 10 more of our people from Russian captivity, despite all difficulties," Zelensky wrote. He thanked everyone involved in this exchange, including representatives of the Vatican.

Among the released is Nariman Dzhelylal, the deputy head of the Crimean Tatar assembly (Mejlis), who was captured by the Russians in 2021, seven years after Russia annexed Crimea, and two Greek Catholic priests.

As reported by Reuters, citing Ukrainian media, five of the released civilians were held in Belarus, Russia's closest ally, which allowed Moscow to use its territory to attack Ukraine in 2022.

According to Ukrainian authorities, the release of civilians was part of the latest prisoner exchange; both sides handed over 90 people to the other. Reuters notes that Russia did not mention this exchange.

© essanews.com
·

Downloading, reproduction, storage, or any other use of content available on this website—regardless of its nature and form of expression (in particular, but not limited to verbal, verbal-musical, musical, audiovisual, audio, textual, graphic, and the data and information contained therein, databases and the data contained therein) and its form (e.g., literary, journalistic, scientific, cartographic, computer programs, visual arts, photographic)—requires prior and explicit consent from Wirtualna Polska Media Spółka Akcyjna, headquartered in Warsaw, the owner of this website, regardless of the method of exploration and the technique used (manual or automated, including the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence programs). The above restriction does not apply solely to facilitate their search by internet search engines and uses within contractual relations or permitted use as specified by applicable law.Detailed information regarding this notice can be found  here.