Between Russia and a hard place
A Chechen resident of Ukraine is awaiting deportation to Russia in a Swiss prison. A tale of bureaucracy and misunderstanding

Ali Batayev, a 40-year-old ethnic Chechen, is now in a Swiss deportation centre. Batayev is a Russian citizen who was living in the Ukrainian city of Odesa with his wife Olga until the Russian invasion, at which point they had to leave.
Batayev travelled to Switzerland where he applied unsuccessfully for asylum and now risks deportation to Russia, which would likely put his life in danger due to his opposition to the Kremlin-installed head of Chechnya Ramzan Kadyrov, whose agents have reportedly already “visited” his father and uncle who live there.
Novaya Gazeta Europe spoke to Batayev and his wife about how he ended up living in Ukraine, why he decided to go to Switzerland, and what deportation to Russia might mean for him.
“Kadyrov’s rule is an occupation. To accept it meant giving up one’s own dignity, identity, and the traditions of our people,” Batayev says, explaining his decision to leave Russia.
The letter also claimed that Russia was not in a state of generalised violence, though it accepted that the situation could be considered tense due to the war, a claim that was subsequently upheld by a Swiss court.

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