Sri Lankans Freed from Russian Brutality in Ukraine

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Ukraine’s recapture of the city of Izyum has brought multiple allegations of atrocities under Russian occupation. Among the accounts emerging is that of a group of Sri Lankans held captive for months. Here, they tell their story.

We thought we would never get out alive,” says Dilujan Paththinajakan.

Dilujan was one of seven Sri Lankans captured by Russian forces in May. The group had just set out on a “huge walk to safety” from their homes in Kupiansk, north-eastern Ukraine, to the relative safety of Kharkiv, some 120km (75 miles) away.

But at the first checkpoint they came across, they were captured by Russian soldiers. The Sri Lankans were blindfolded, their hands tied, and taken to a machine tool factory in the town of Vovchansk, near the Russian border.

It was the start of a four-month nightmare which would see them kept prisoner, used as forced labour, and even tortured.

The group had come to Ukraine to find work, or study. Now, they were prisoners, surviving on very little food, only allowed to use the toilet once a day for two minutes.” On the occasions they were allowed to shower, that too was restricted to just two minutes.

Ordeals
The men – mainly in their 20s – were all kept in one room. The only woman in the group, 50-year-old Mary Edit Uthajkumar, was kept separately.

They locked us in a room,” she said “They used to beat us when we went to take a shower. They didn’t even allow me to meet the others. We were stuck inside for three months.”

Mary, her face already scarred by a car bomb in Sri Lanka, has a heart condition, but didn’t receive any medicine for it.

But it was the impact of the solitude which really took its toll.

Being alone, I was so tense,” she says. “They said I was having mental health issues and gave me tablets. But I didn’t take them.

Others have been left with even more visible reminders of what they had endured: one of the men removed his shoes to show his ‘toenails had been torn off with pliers.’ A second man reportedly also suffered that torture.

The group also spoke of being beaten for no apparent reason – of “Russian soldiers who would get drunk and then attack them.

 

 

 

 

BBC /Shakirat Sadiq

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