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Russian torture accounts emerge from Ukraine

And they did it to Artem, though in his case only once. "They made me hold two wires," he said.

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Kharkiv (Ukraine): In north-eastern Ukraine, a counter-offensive has seen the nation’s forces recapture swathes of territory and drive out Russian troops. But in the newly-liberated areas, relief and sorrow are intertwined — as accounts emerge of torture and killings during the long months of Russian occupation.

Artem, who lives in the city of Balakliya in the Kharkiv region, told the BBC he was held by Russians for more than 40 days and was tortured with electrocution.

Balakliya was liberated on September 8 after being occupied for more than six months. The epicenter of the brutality was the city’s police station, which Russian forces used as their headquarters.

Artem said he could hear screams of pain and terror coming from other cells. The occupiers made sure the cries could be heard, he said, by turning off the building’s noisy ventilation system, the BBC report said.

“They turned it off so everyone could hear how people scream when they are shocked with electricity,” he told us. “They did this to some of the prisoners every other day… They even did this to the women”.

And they did it to Artem, though in his case only once. “They made me hold two wires,” he said.

“There was an electric generator. The faster it went, the higher the voltage. They said, ‘if you let it go, you are finished. Then they started asking questions. They said I was lying, and they started spinning it even more and the voltage increased,” BBC quoted him as saying.

Artem told us he was detained because the Russians found a picture of his brother, a soldier, in uniform.

Another man from Balakliya was held for 25 days because he had the Ukrainian flag, Artem said.

A school principal called Tatiana told us she was held in the police station for three days and also heard screams from other cells.

“We visited the police station, and saw the Lord’s Prayer scratched on the wall of one of the cramped cells, alongside markings to indicate how many days had passed.”

Ukrainian police officers say as many as eight men were held in cells intended for two people. They say locals were scared to even pass the station when the Russians were in charge, in case they were grabbed by Russian soldiers.

In Balakliya’s city center, where the Ukrainian flag flies again, crowds gathered around a small truck carrying food supplies. Many in the queue were elderly and looked exhausted, but there were happy reunions too as friends embraced each other for the first time since the Russians were driven out.

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