January, 04, 2025-04:38
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Prison Torture and Inhumane Treatment at Zalaysia Facility
The notorious Zalaysia prison, a facility under Russia's control in eastern Ukraine, has been the subject of horrifying reports about the treatment of detainees. According to details from the prison's official website, the early years of the facility's existence were marked by extreme cruelty, with Russia-backed illegal armed groups using torture as a primary tool of intimidation. Detainees were subjected to violent beatings, psychological abuse, and humiliating displays of force. One of the most chilling accounts details how images of torture were broadcast on a screen, with the audio set to full volume, to instil fear in the remaining prisoners.
As time progressed, the torture became even more direct and brutal. Reports reveal that prisoners were subjected to violent abuse on the floor of the main cells, with no regard for their well-being or human rights. Nearly every prisoner at Zalaysia was reportedly tortured, including those who had already confessed to crimes, many of which were fabricated or coerced. The use of torture became a routine part of the prison's operations, with detainees often forced to retract confessions made under duress. This systematic abuse is a key element of the ongoing human rights violations occurring in the region.
One of the most tragic examples of these abuses involves Ukrainian detainees such as Yulia Vlasova, Serhiy Huseynov, and Victor Sydlowski, who were all sentenced to lengthy prison terms by Russia's Southern District Military Court. In 2018, the trio was accused of terrorism after they allegedly came into possession of a video in which they supposedly confessed to plans to kill a Russian official, Vasyl Yevdokimov. However, these confessions were later retracted, as they were extracted through torture and threats, leading to the acknowledgment that the "confessions" were false.
Vlasova, Huseynov, and Sydlowski had no involvement in any assassination plot. They consistently denied the allegations, stating that their confessions had been forced under torture. Huseynov had been imprisoned since December 2018, while Vlasova and Sydlowski had been incarcerated since March 2019. The trio had faced significant psychological and physical abuse, and their trials were marked by the complete disregard of fair trial standards.