Russia

They brought me to a dimly lit room filled with a heavy stench, Denis, 34, said of his arrest in southern Russia byFederal Security Service (FSB) officers.
There was a big table, eerie concrete walls, floor and ceiling, and this was imprinted in my memory a portrait of Putin.
It looked like a torture chamber.
They forced me to sit on a chair, put a plastic bag on my head again and started beating me.Denis was arrested last year on apparent suspicion of involvement in an anti-Kremlin paramilitary group fighting alongside the Ukrainian army.
He is now sharing his story for the first time.For safety reasons, his surname and some details about his story have been withheld.For years, Denis had been a part of the fan culture surrounding his hometown Moscow's FC Spartak football team.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, he said the fan community split in two, with those who supported the invasion on one side and those who opposed it on the other.
Denis fell into the second camp.I had more right-leaning views before, but of course, when the war started, I supported Ukraine.
I have people I know there, even friends, Ukrainians I constantly kept in contact with, he told The Moscow Times.Today, he said he believes that he caught the FSBs interest because a pro-war fan told the authorities that Denis was planning to enlist in one of the Russian paramilitary groups fighting against the Russian army in Ukraine.On Jan.
12, 2023, Denis was crossing the border with Georgia for a vacation when he was stopped by border guards and asked to unlock his phone.After he refused, the guards undressed him and discovered a tattoo of an Iron Cross a German military emblem often used by the far right on his shoulder.
The Iron Cross is considered by Russian authorities to be a display of extremist or Nazi symbols, a crime in Russia.The border guards examination swiftly turned into an interrogation.
Denis was accused of wanting to kill Russians and asked how many of his friends had gone to fight for Ukraine.The Verkhny Lars checkpoint on the Russian-Georgian border.Yelena Afonina / TASSThe experience recounted by Denis reflects a wider trend in which the FSB targets people believed to be involved with the volunteer paramilitary groups fighting for Ukraine, which have launched several cross-border incursions since the start of the war.A lot of effort is put into identifying not just those who are cooperating with these organizations, but also anyone remotely inclined to do so, Yevgeny Smirnov,a lawyer and civil rights activist who focuses on persecution by the special services, told The Moscow Times.In late March, the FSB said it had arrested seven people in Moscow.
The suspects were alleged supporters of the Russian Volunteer Corps, one of these militias.The FSB and their associates try to probe people to find out their attitude toward the Russian Volunteer Corps and the Freedom of Russia Legion, Smirnov said.
If a person turns out to be at least slightly sympathetic, the enforcers provoke them to formulate the right phrase: a phrase fit for prosecuting that person as a terrorist.InterrogationAfter refusing to unlock his phone a second time, Denis said the border guards started slapping his face and spitting at him.
He threw his phone against the floor in frustration, breaking the device.
Soon after, the guards handed Denis to FSB agents, who put a plastic bag over his head and locked him in a minivan.Weve already stamped your passport.
It means that you have already crossed the Georgian border.
You are f***ed.
Everyone will think you fell from a mountain, and nobody will ever find you thats how they were threatening me, Denis recalled.
I told them my mother was a lawyer and that she would find me.He said he believes the building he was eventually brought into was the regional FSB headquarters in Vladikavkaz, the capital of the North Caucasus republic of North Ossetia.They brought me to a dimly lit room filled with a heavy stench.
There was a big table, eerie concrete walls, floor and ceiling, and this was imprinted in my memory a portrait of Putin.
It looked like a torture chamber.
They forced me to sit on a chair, put a plastic bag on my head again and started beating me.
They demanded that I unlock my phone.Denis said he was able to endure the beating because he was physically in shape.They kept abusing me, but at one point they took the bag off so that I wouldnt suffocate, he said.But then they moved to the most unpleasant part of the interrogation the electricity.
My hands were cuffed to the chair behind my back.
They greased both of my hands with something and started electrocuting me.
I dont know if they were using a live wire, but it felt like one.
They shocked my neck once too, but they were mostly passing the current through my hands.FSB officers.nac.gov.ruThe FSB officers repeatedly accused Denis of being a Nazi.
Fed up, he told them they were Nazis themselves, as they were the ones abducting a person and torturing him with electricity.What, you think the SBU [Security Service of Ukraine] is any better? he recalled one of the officers saying in response.When Denis could no longer endure the torture and humiliation, he kicked the chair over while still cuffed to it, and started rolling on the floor and moaning.
His interrogators removed his handcuffs and sat on him.Then I curled up so that they couldn't unclench my hands or hurt me in any way.
I remember one of them laughing and saying Look, hes acting like hes exercising.
I dont remember how long it lasted.
I lost track of time, it was like a bad dream.After a while, Denis finally managed to break away and run to the next room over, a kitchen.
The officers cornered him against a wall.One FSB officer who wore a Columbia Sportswear hat and appeared to be the commander ordered the others to stop.If only youd use all that energy of yours for the right cause, Denis recalled the man saying.I wont tell you what I thought at that moment, Denis said.They cuffed me again, put a bag on my head and put me into a car.
They kept saying We dont give a f*** about you, its just a matter of time before we hack your phone.
Youre just making things worse for yourself.ArrestDenis was returned to the border checkpoint and asked to sign a document stating he had no legal complaints against the police and had voluntarily agreed not to cross the border.
He refused and was transferred to the local police, who brought him back to Vladikavkaz.The next day, a court charged him with disorderly conduct for swearing at the border crossing and sentenced him to 15 days of arrest.During the last hour of his sentence, Denis was visited by the head of the detention center, whoordered his staff to report Denis for allegedly making a mess in his cell.He was then moved to a holding cell and left there overnight.They had left me to spend the night locked with a hobo-looking alcoholic.
It was winter, so I was wearing a parka and jeans, he said.FSB officer with a detainee.nac.gov.ruIn the morning, security officers brought him into a room where he was met by eight individuals who identified themselves as employees of Russias Center for Combating Extremism.It turned out that my cellmate reported me to the police and claimed I was showing him my Iron Cross tattoo in other words, displaying a symbol of an extremist nature.
The cross is tattooed on my bicep, you cant even see it from under a shirt.
Maybe they gave him a bottle of vodka to report that.Denis was then brought to the court again and charged with the administrative offenses of dirtying his cell and displaying an extremist symbol.
His mother, a practicing lawyer, came to Vladikavkaz but was not allowed to represent her son.
He was arrested for another 11 days.Once he was released from custody, Denis and his mother returned to Moscow, where he was detained almost immediately after getting off the plane.At the baggage claim, I saw policemen talking on their radios and looking at me.
I realized what was going on and in a moment they walked up to me and told me I was to be arrested, as I was on the BOLO [law enforcement bulletin].Denis was brought to a building across from the airport.
His mothers claim that she was his legal representative was again ignored.I was brought into an interrogation room and seated at the table.
Then two individuals wearing face masks came in.
The first one started asking me about football fans, about Ukraine, all of these questions again.
Then he pointed at the second thug and said Look, he just came back from the front, you are f***ed.Denis was again asked how many of his friends had gone to fight for Ukraine and pressed to explain why he broke his phone.
After he did not answer, the interrogators made Denis sign an agreement saying he had voluntarily cooperated with the FSB.He was sat in front of a camera and forced to promise to remove his tattoo and to say he supported Russias special military operation in Ukraine.They must have thought they would get dirt on me like this.
They told me, Well keep it for ourselves, so that your friends would beat the s*** out of you, just in case.
They also said that I must report anyone willing to join the Russian Volunteer Corps or who is already a part of the organization.DepartureAfter leaving the building, Denis said he decided he could no longer live in fear.
Within a month, he had left Russia.
He asked that the details of his departure not be published due to safety reasons.According to human rights activist Smirnov, despite torture being prohibited under Russian law, law enforcement services encourage the practice among its officers.Last month, the key suspects in the Crocus City Hall massacre appeared in court with clear signs of abuse after unverified footage appeared to show them being tortured during their interrogation.Before the war 90% of those charged with terrorism were tortured and it didnt even matter if they were proven guilty.
Now, since the beginning of the war, the number of criminal offenses where torture of suspects with impunity is allowed has increased, Smirnov said.Experts interviewed by the Financial Times said the Russian special services top priority is suppressing the pro-democratic opposition and persecuting those who support Ukraine and that they prioritize these efforts over preventing actual terrorist threats.As a result, the gruesome interrogation practices, including torture, once reserved for terrorism suspects have increasingly been directed at political activists.Its like there is a solid wall: even if there is physical proof of torture, like bruises or marks from electrocution and beating, getting justice is virtually impossible, Smirnov said.
It appears to be a coordinated policy, implying that anyone supervising compliance with the law is supposed to turn a blind eye.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


[Russia] - 'Give Me a Choice': Activists Urge Russian Doctors to Defend Women's Right to Abortion


[Russia] - Russian Envoy Warns of Military Response if Greenland Conflict Erupts


Russia Returns 1K Bodies of Killed Ukrainian Soldiers


Pro-Kremlin Figures Decry Bill Criminalizing Access to ‘Extremist’ Content


Ukrainian Drone Attacks on Russia Kill At Least 2


Russia Quietly Cancels Flagship Arms Expo – Reports


[Russia] - Russia Launches Hundreds of Drones at Ukraine, Defying Trump's Peace Ultimatum


[Russia] - Russia Expands Free Public Wi-Fi as Mobile Internet Blackouts Spread


Environmental Experts and Russia’s Human Rights Chief Urge Lawmakers to Reject Baikal Logging Bill


[Russia] - Russian Customs Authorities Seize $153M Worth of Cocaine Hidden in Banana Shipment


So You Want to Travel to Russia. Here’s What You Should Know.


[Russia] - EU Delays 18th Sanctions Package Against Russia Amid Slovak Objections


Ukrainian Drone Strike in Belgorod Region Kills Man


[Russia] - State Prosecutors Seek to Seize Latvian Co-Owner's Stake in Bread Bakery Over 'Extremism' Claims


[Russia] - Russia Moves to Streamline Process for Labeling Groups as 'Extremist'


Floods Prompt Evacuations in Earth’s Coldest Inhabited Settlements


[Russia] - Russian POWs' Families Accuse Moscow of Redeploying Their Loved Ones After Prisoner Swaps


[Russia] - Top Russian University Launches Master's Program on Sanctions Circumvention


[Russia] - Latvian Court Overturns License Revocation of Exiled Russian Television Channel Dozhd


[Russia] - 5 Killed in Helicopter Crash in Russia's Far East


Rostov Police to Be Reimbursed for Refusing Bribes in ‘Anti-Corruption’ Effort


Russian Parliament Approves Return of State-Backed Microlenders to Mortgage Market


China Pledges Closer Ties With Russia After Trump’s Sanctions Threat


[Russia] - Russia Moves to Centralize Mobile Internet Shutdowns Amid Rise in Ukrainian Drone Attacks


Italy’s Culture Minister Slams Concert Invite for Pro-Kremlin Conductor


[Russia] - Heavy Rain Triggers Flash Floods Across Moscow


[Russia] - American Who Helped Russian Forces in Ukraine Receives Russian Citizenship


[Russia] - 'We Don't Care': Russian Officials, Media React to Trump's Ukraine War Ultimatum


[Russia] - Russian Stock Market Rises After Trump Sets Ukraine Peace Deal Deadline


Ukrainian Drone Strikes on Voronezh Injure At Least 22 People


[Russia] - Kremlin to Expand Soft Power Push With Cultural Outposts in Gulf States


Trump Gives Russia 50 Days to Resolve Ukraine War


Lightning Strike Kills 3 People at Tula Region Resort


‘My Homeland Is a Country Within a Country’: Avar Activist Zarema Gasanova


Russian Airports to Begin Rollout of AI-Powered Security Systems


Military Court Jails Exiled Writer Boris Akunin 14 Years in Absentia


EU Moves Toward Floating Price Cap for Russian Oil


Son of Rostec Executive Detained in Spain on Money Laundering Charges – OCCRP


Russia’s Spy Agency Accuses NATO of Dragging Moldova Into Conflict


Russia Builds Protective Bunkers at Airbases After Ukraine's 'Spider's Web' Drone Strikes


Chechen Woman Who Fled Abusive Family Briefly Detained in Georgia, Activists Say


Russian Workers at Turkish Nuclear Plant Report Months of Unpaid Wages


China’s Foreign Minister Praises Ties With Russia During Lavrov Visit


Russia-China Trade Falls 9% in First Half of 2025


Ukraine Says It Killed Russian Agents Behind Intelligence Officer’s Assassination


Russia Slams Report It Backed ‘Zero Enrichment’ Iran Nuclear Deal


Russia Claims New Village in Ukraine’s Donetsk Region


[Russia] - Moscow Blames Sanctions for Russia-UN Food Deal Collapse


[Russia] - Russia Says Foreign Minister Lavrov Met Kim Jong Un


[Russia] - Ukraine Says 6 Killed in Massive Russian Drone, Missile Attack


[Russia] - Conference Seeks Solidarity Among Indigenous Peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Central Asia


Russia and Belarus to Develop AI Rooted in 'Traditional Values'


[Russia] - Russia's FM Lavrov Arrives in North Korea


Russia Orders Closure of Polish Consulate in Kaliningrad


[Russia] - Elite Russian Marine Unit Commander Reportedly Killed in Ukrainian Missile Strike


Russia Nationalizes Country’s Third-Largest Gold Producer


[Russia] - Russia Weighs Scrapping Its Only Aircraft Carrier After Years of Restoration Delays


Border Defense Fraud Probe Targets Belgorod Region Officials – Kommersant


[Russia] - Dutch Court Sentences Russian to 3 Years for Sharing Microchip Technology


Peskov Defends Russia’s Media Crackdown as Part of ‘Information War’


[Russia] - Starovoit Buried at Historic St. Petersburg Cemetery Days After Suspected Suicide


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attacks on Western Russia Kill At Least 3


[Russia] - Russian Military Personnel Costs Hit Record High-- Analysis


[Russia] - St. Petersburg Court Drops 'LGBT Propaganda' Case Against Popular Bookstore


[Russia] - Russian Police Offered Bonuses to Recruit Detainees for Ukraine War-- Vyorstka


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attack on Belgorod Region Kills 2, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian State Media Turns on Trump After Putin Criticism


[Russia] - Putin Skips Memorial Service for Ex-Transportation Minister, Sends Wreath Instead


[Russia] - 'We Are Being Held Without Protection': North Caucasus Women Decry Dire Conditions in Kurdish-Run Syrian Camps


[Russia] - Rubio and Lavrov Held 'Frank Exchange' on Sidelines of ASEAN Summit, Moscow Says


[Russia] - Moscow Swelters in Heat Wave After Powerful Storms Batter the City


Nizhny Novgorod Region Rolls Back Migrant Work Ban Amid Labor Shortages


[Russia] - Russian Basketball Player Arrested in France at Request of United States


Gelendzhik Airport to Reopen More Than 3 Years After Wartime Closure


[Russia] - Moscow Theatre Director Questioned in Large-Scale Embezzlement Probe


Russia Adds Entrepreneur Kidnapped at Moscow Train Station to ‘Terrorists and Extremists’ List


[Russia] - Death by Falling: A Timeline of Cases Across Russia and Abroad


[Russia] - Russia to Launch Direct Flights From Moscow to North Korean Capital on July 27


Crimean Woman Fined Over $1K for Posting Photos of Men in Wedding Dresses Online


[Russia] - Leading European Court Rules Russia Committed Rights Abuses in Ukraine, Downing of MH17


[Russia] - Rangers Kill 11 Brown Bears Lured by Food Waste in Russia's Far East


Russia Reopens Embassy in Tehran 2 Weeks After Israel-Iran Ceasefire


[Russia] - Kremlin Brushes Off Trump's 'Tough Talk' and Claims 'No Disagreement' on Ukraine Negotiations


[Russia] - Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to Visit North Korea This Weekend


[Russia] - Russian Lawmakers Greenlight Restoration of FSB-Run Prison Network


[Russia] - FSB Agents Shoot and Kill Man Accused of Planning Bridge Bombing in Saratov Region


[Russia] - Russian Military Launches Largest-Ever Air Attack on Ukraine


Ukrainian Drone Attack on Kursk City Beach Kills 4, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian Broadcaster RTVI Starts Airing in Mali


[Russia] - Trump Accuses Putin of Talking 'Bulls ***' on Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia Plans USAID-Inspired Development Model in Bid to Extend Global Influence


FSB Accuses Ex-Independent Media Manager of Treason


Russia Blacklists Yale University as ‘Undesirable’ Organization


[Russia] - Ignore Donald Trump's 'Political Seesaw,' Russia's Medvedev Says


Russian Military Drone Crashes Into Dacha in Republic of Tatarstan


Nadezhdin Campaign Manager Stripped of Russian Citizenship


Who Was Roman Starovoit, the Sacked Transportation Minister Found Dead in Apparent Suicide