Legal status: unknown
Thousands of Ukrainian civilians are being held captive in Russia for ‘opposing the special operation’, with courts denying them basic right to counsel

Ivan Honchar, a 24-year-old Ukrainian citizen, was fleeing the Russia-occupied city of Mariupol together with his family at the beginning of April. He, like almost all war refugees from the city, had to go through the “filtration” process. After an interrogation, he was detained; he never re-joined his relatives and basically ended up in captivity. There has been no way of contacting him for eight months now.
Mykyta Shkryabin, a 20-year-old Ukrainian, is in a similar situation. He was detained in the Kharkiv region at the end of March. There were no criminal charges pressed against him, just like in the case of Ivan Honchar; his legal status is unknown. A Russian court announced that Mykyta had no procedural rights, even the right to counsel.
Holding civilians as captives is a war crime. However, this now occurs regularly in Russia. According to the Agora human rights group, thousands of captive Ukrainians are currently confined outside the legal field. Novaya Gazeta Europe explains how Ukrainian civilians end up held hostage in Russia and how Russian lawyers are trying to break them free.
“Just imagine, here I am, I don’t know what to do, where to [ask for help]. I am walking and crying, and that’s it. Where’s my son?”
There has been no way to contact Ivan for eight months, his relatives and human rights defenders do not know where he is.
According to her, civilians are mainly captured on the occupied territories of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine. However, Ivan was captured on the territory of Russia.
“First things first, we need to establish his location.”
“There was a rumour that he was taken by Russian soldiers. Eyewitnesses saw them take him away in an unknown direction.
“Shkryabin is a civilian detained as a prisoner. It’s unknown where he is currently, the Defence Ministry won’t say,” lawyer Solovyov says.
The court found that Shkryabin had been detained for “illegal actions”, however, he is not a person of interest in a criminal case, there is no prosecution being conducted against him. Which is why, according to the court’s decision, he has no procedural rights,
Thousands of captives were held in the colony in Olenivka — from civilian volunteers to Ukrainian servicemen. All of them were captured in the south and east of the country.

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