Stanislav Aseyev: “The first month in detention was the hardest”
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One of the few independent journalists to stay in eastern Ukraine’s Donbass region after the separatist takeover, Stanislav Aseyev ended up being detained arbitrarily there for two and a half years. He described the experience in a video during a visit to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), which campaigned for his release while he was held.
After his abduction by Russian-backed separatists on 2 June 2017, Stanislav Aseyev spent a month and a half being tortured in an isolated cellar. He was then transferred to Isolatsia, a former contemporary art centre converted into a secret concentration camp in Donetsk, the “capital” of the self-proclaimed “Donetsk People’s Republic,” and was forced to make public “confessions” on Russian TV.
Released during a prisoner exchange on 29 December 2019, he has related his traumatic experiences in a book published in French today (Editions Atlande). And he agreed to talk to us about his experiences in this video:
Russia is ranked 150th out of 180 countries in RSF's 2020 World Press Freedom Index. Ukraine is ranked 97th.