Amnesty details widespread kidnapping and torture in Ukraine

Amnesty details widespread kidnapping and torture in Ukraine

KIEV - A new Amnesty International report on Friday highlighted the "hundreds" of abductions and incidents of torture by pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine, and also criticised the excessive force used by government forces.

"They beat me with their fists, a chair, anything they could find. They stubbed out cigarettes on my leg and electrocuted me. It went on for so long, I couldn't feel anything anymore. I just passed out," Sasha, a 19-year-old kidnapped in the eastern city of Lugansk, told the rights group in the report.

Sasha had been a member of pro-Kiev "self-defence forces" in the eastern separatist stronghold. He said he was only released after his father paid a $60,000 (45,000-euro) fine, after which he fled to the capital.

Amnesty's report paints a grim portrait of rampant kidnapping, extortion and torture in eastern Ukraine, where pro-Russian forces seized control of key cities earlier this year and are currently engaged in a desperate battle against government forces.

The rights group said it was impossible to provide reliable statistics amid the chaos, with no attempt by authorities to create a single register of incidents or victims.

But the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission for Ukraine has logged 222 credible cases of abduction, while Ukraine's interior ministry puts the figure at 387 between April and June 7 alone, including 39 journalists.

Amnesty also noted reports of unlawful detention by pro-Kiev forces.

It focused on video footage from May that appeared to show a member of parliament, Oleg Lyashko, and several armed men interrogating two separatist leaders in the back of a car, reportedly in the eastern city of Mariupol.

Both captives were blindfolded and one -- a former defence minister of the self-styled Donetsk People's Republic -- was almost completely naked and bleeding from two cuts, Amnesty said.

The group also raised concerns about excessive force used by pro-Kiev forces as they sought to regain control of the east, including an incident on April 24 when they reportedly shot dead five armed men at a roadblock near Slavyansk, and the reported killing of two civilians when troops fired into a crowd in the town of Krasnoarmeisk on May 11.

"The lawless situation in eastern Ukraine has been facilitated by the erosion of the rule of law over the past six months which has seen repeated amnesties for perpetrators of crimes," said Amnesty, calling for the immediate release of all hostages and investigations into rights abuses on both sides of the conflict.

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.