Ukraine

Some of Ukraine’s youngest defenders (clockwise from upper lefthand corner): Serhiy Dodurov, Oleksandr Romanuk, Deniz, Ivanna Tsimerman, and Sofiya Yanchevska

As Russia’s full-scale war enters its fourth year, a generation raised under air-raid sirens is now old enough to fight. Despite not yet being subject to conscription, these young Ukrainians are voluntarily joining the military, trading lecture halls for dugouts, or trying to balance both worlds.

Their decision comes at a time when Ukraine is facing mounting pressure to address critical manpower shortages. In 2024, the government lowered the mobilization age from 27 to 25 and later introduced one-year “special contracts” aimed at 18 to 24 year-olds, with Hr 1 million ($24,000) pay and free higher education.

Meanwhile, many young Ukrainians are making another choice — to leave the country — heightening fears of a looming demographic crisis.

The Kyiv Independent spoke to five young Ukrainians about why they enlisted, how they balance study and service, and what they hope for after the war.

Continue reading “Ukraine”

603,628 Kilometers Square (Solidarity with Ukraine)


Dear Kyiv Independent readers,

Thank you for your continued support.

In case you missed it, we recently added a new T-shirt to our online store to help the charitable organization East SOS, continuing our commitment to support important Ukrainian initiatives through your purchases.

After Russia demanded that Ukraine cede five of its regions as a condition for a ceasefire, we designed a shirt to show solidarity with Ukraine — all 603,628 square kilometers of it.

In June, we introduced the “603,628 km²” T-shirt and are donating the profits to the Ukrainian charity East SOS. Thanks to readers like you, we’ve already raised more than $5,000 to help them rebuild homes in war-torn eastern Ukraine.

We’ll collect donations until Aug. 10, so you have six days left to grab your shirt and support the cause.

We also want to give you a closer look at East SOS. The organization provides comprehensive assistance to Ukrainians in front-line regions and internally displaced persons (IDPs) that were forced to flee the war. The charity was launched in 2015, focusing on providing essential supplies and humanitarian aid for those living in the front-line areas.

One project East SOS is currently raising money for is to repair houses in eastern Ukraine that have been damaged by Russia — this is the project that the Kyiv Independent will support. So far, East SOS has helped repair nearly 1,500 homes in Kharkiv and Donetsk oblasts, with another 300 households waiting for assistance. The charity works to repair private homes, prioritizing requests from elderly people living alone or individuals with disabilities — essentially those who are unable to carry out the work themselves.

East SOS employees restoring houses, damaged by Russian attacks.

The East SOS team steps in immediately after a house is damaged, fixing roofs and windows, preventing further damage from rain or snow. After an emergency response, the team returns in order to restore homes severely damaged by the Russian attacks.

It costs around $1,500 for East SOS to repair one house — thanks to your help, we have already raised funds to cover the repair of about three houses.

You can buy the “603,628 km²” T-shirt in white here or in black here.

Members of the Kyiv Independent community are also eligible for a 15% discount on everything sold in our online store. Join our community and find out more about membership benefits here.

You can also learn more about East SOS here or donate directly to them here.

Thank you for your support. If you have any questions regarding the T-shirt, please feel free to contact us store@kyivindependent.com.

Best,

The Kyiv Independent team

Source: Kyiv Independent newsletter, 4 August 2025. I ordered one of these new t-shirts today (as a gift to myself for my upcoming birthday), and would urge you to buy one too. ||| TRR



News from Ukraine Bulletin No. 157 (3 August 2025)

In this week’s bulletin: Russia’s mistreatment and disappearance of prisoners; politically motivated persecution in the occupied territories.

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Solidarity in grief: KVPU calls for support after deadly Russian attacks (KVPU August1st)

Melitopol journalist Iryna Levchenko abducted in 2023 ‘found’ imprisoned in Russian-occupied Donetsk (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group August 1st)

The Face of Resistance: The story of Crimean Tatar activist Ruslan Zeitullaiev (Crimea Platform August 1st)

Young Crimean couple could face life sentences for resistance to Russia’s war against Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 29th)

Russia resettles ‘veterans’ and their families in occupied Ukraine, while deporting Ukrainians (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 28th)

 Russian invaders abduct young Ukrainian, sentence her to 12.5 years for helping Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 28th)

CEPA published an article on the preservation of the Crimean Tatar language (Crimea Platform July 28th)

News from Ukraine:

Ukraine uncovers major bribery scheme in electronic warfare systems procurement: MP and officials involved (Ukrainska Pravda August 2nd)

Rebel, Love, fight corruption! Statement of student union Priama Diia (European Network for Solidarity with Ukraine August 2nd)

“Aren’t you tired of feeding people garbage?” Ukrainian parliament reverses anti-corruption law after street protests (Euromaidan Press July 31st)

`Fighting for our Future’: Kyiv protesters cheer return of anti-corruption safeguards (Kyiv Post July31st)

“More and more people don’t want to speak Russian”: How Ukrainians’ attitudes toward the Russian language changed during the war (The Insider, July 28th)

Aerial Terror in Kherson – A City Under Drone Siege (Byline Times, July 28th)

How the controversial Law No. 4555-IX undermines anti-corruption and reintegration — Alena Lunova on the JustTalk Context podcast (Zmina July 25th)

War-related news from Russia:

Recruiting for units with anti-authoritarians (Solidarity Collectives August 1st)

Denys Matsola: Updates from capitivity (Solidarity Collectives August 1st)

Ukrainian political prisoner vanishes after being abducted by FSB instead of released from Russian prison (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 31st)

Yulia Moskovskaya, Terrorist (Russian Reader, July 29th)

Cars for Ukraine (Russian Reader, July 27th)

News from the Front: 

A City Destroyed: Russia says it controls Ukraine’s Chasiv Yar after 16 months of fighting. But the battle grinds on, and only ruins remain (Meduza August 1st)

A fortress under threat: A year after reaching Pokrovsk, Russian forces appear ready to launch a full assault (Meduza July 30th)

Analysis and comment:

2000 Meters to Andriivka – the Ukrainian working class in war (Liam record, August 3rd)

Capital, Power and War: The crisis of Russia’s peripheral accumulation regime (Links August 1st)

Take back control of your gadgets: right to repair and the opportunity it presents for Ukraine (Commons.com, August 1st)

Wartime protest across Russia’s internal borders (Posle Media July 30th)

A political crisis that could weaken the war effort itself: What Zelensky’s anti-corruption U-turn means at a `precarious moment’ for Ukraine (Meduza July 30th)

Dying embers: Russia’s coal crisis triggers bankruptcies and mass layoffs (The Insider July 30th)

Ukraine between empire and revolution: Lev Yurkevych’s anti-colonial Marxism (Links July 29th)

Why the current wave of nationalization in Russia is more than just a redistribution of assets (IStories July 29th)

Ukraine’s New Cabinet: Neoliberal Reforms Threaten Wartime Solidarity (International Viewpoint, July 26th)

Research of human rights abuses:

ZMINA highlighted politically motivated persecution in the occupied territories at Helsinki+50 Conference side event (Zmina August1st)

Prisoners beaten, threatened with new sentences to force them to fight Russia’s war against Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group August 1st)

OSCE and Participating States must act now to free its staff members from Russia’s captivity and prosecution (Zmina July 31st)

Abductions of Ukrainian Women and Girls (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 31st)

Silence—as a form of torture (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group July 31st)

A civil society manifesto on the 50th anniversary of the Helsinki Final Act (Zmina July 30th)

Do not legitimise the occupation: Mexican and Brazilian museums urged to refrain from collaborating with institutions in occupied territories (Crimea Human Rights Group July 30th)

Side event at the Helsinki+50 conference: “Crimea: 11 years of occupation – restoring justice, restoring OSCE commitments” (Crimea Human Rights Group July 30th)

Important Note: We will not be publishing a bulletin next week. The next bulletin, no. 158, will appear in two week’s time on 17 August 2025. 

==

This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. To receive it by email each Monday, email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com. To stop the bulletin, reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field. More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/. We are also on twitterBlueskyFacebook and Substack, and the bulletin is stored online here.

Source: Ukraine Information Group

News from Ukraine Bulletin 127

“Our friendship is eternal and unshakable” Ukrainian poster, 1983
Courtesy of Soviet Visuals

In this week’s bulletin: Ukraine labour relations under martial lawDemocracy uprising in the Caucasus/ ‘Swift peace deal’ questioned/ Ukraine: resisting arbitrariness from above/ Russian torture and denial of medical treatment

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Russia confirms revenge sentences against savagely tortured Crimean Tatar cousins, seized with Nariman Dzhelyal (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 20th)

Abducted Kherson activist sentenced for ‘spying for Ukraine’ while in Russian captivity denied vital medical treatment (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 19th)

Russia churns out surreal ‘terrorism’ sentences against Ukrainian POWs for defending Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 17th)

20-year-old from Mariupol sentenced to 11 years for argument opposing Russia’s war against Ukraine   (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 16th)

Human rights defenders: Ukrainian citizens under occupation need support (Zmina, December 13th)

Forced reality (Alter Pravo, October 2024)

Life Under Occupation (Alter Pravo, October 2024) 

The situation at the front:

Battlefield developments: ‘Enter Pyongyang’ (Meduza, 19 December)

News from Ukraine – general:  

Joint appeal of representatives of the coalition “Ukraine. Five in the Morning” and the Initiative “Tribunal for Putin” (Tribunal for Putin, December 21st)

Legal regulation of labour relations in the conditions of martial law in Ukraine (Science Open, December 20th

When a Scalpel Becomes a Kitchen Knife: How Ukrainian Courts Skillfully Distort ECtHR Practice (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 18th)

Ukraine: Inadmissible evidence in examinations (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 18 December)

Do today’s HACC decisions comply with European practice? (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 18th)

Can a huge bail replace justice? (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 18th)

Impact of War on Education and Neoliberal Reforms  (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, December 17th)

“We cannot allow this to happen to our children.” Discussion on “No Child of Ukraine Should Be Left Alone with the Experience of War” (Center for Civil Liberties, December 16th)

Groups of Resistance: How Ukrainians Protect Their Interests from ‘Arbitrariness from Above’  (Commons.com, November 27th)

War-related news from Russia:

Russian anarchist jailed for arson commits suicide on first day of sentence (Novaya Gazeta Europe, 20 December)

St Petersburg: The Terror Scam Gig Economy (The Russian Reader, 20 December)

Duma broadens ‘treason’ charges against anybody opposing Russia’s aggression against Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 18th)

LGBT+ activism in Russia: “Rainbow extremism” (Posle.Media, 18 December)

Legislators equate criticism of Russia’s war against Ukraine with ‘terrorism and extremism’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 16th)

Analysis and comment:

Uprising for democracy in the Caucasus (Tempest, December 21st) 

Those Demanding a Swift ‘Peace Deal’ for Ukraine Don’t Understand How Complex This War Really Is  (Byline Times, December 19th)

Russian Gas Giant Given Access to Global LNG Summit (DeSmog, December 13th)

Caucasus: Resisting local authoritarianism and multipolar imperialisms (CrimethInc, 11 December)

Research of human rights abuses:

Ukrainian children deported to Russia: ‘The development of Russian identity’ (Meduza, 20 Dec)

Kyrylo Budanov met with human rights defenders (Zmina, December 20th)

The European Parliament demands Russia immediately release ill Crimean political prisoners: resolution, proposed by ZMINA, was adopted (Zmina, December 19th)

Russia ignores the needs of Ukrainian political prisoners for medicines and medical care: ZMINA met with Henry Marsh  (Zmina, December 19th)

Human rights defenders call on parliamentarians not to adopt draft laws No. 11538 and No. 11539 (Zmina, December 19th)

ZMINA at the #IBelong forum: challenges on citizenship during the war (Zmina, December 17th)

Over 16,000 Ukrainian civilians held captive in Russia – Ukraine’s ombudsman (Ukrainska Pravda, December 16th)

Upcoming events:

Saturday 18 January 2025, 12:00 midday. National March for Palestine. Assemble BBC, Portland Place, London. Unite the Struggles, Ukraine Information Group and others will march with our banner, “From Ukraine to Palestine, Occupation is a Crime”. Details of assembly point in the new year on our web site or by email. 

Saturday 15 February 2025 11AM — 4PM, Conference: End the Russian invasion and occupation. National Education Union, Mabledon Place, London, WC1H 9BD. Register here.

This is the last News from Ukraine bulletin for 2022. The next one will appear on Monday 6 January. With best wishes for 2025 to our readers

This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. To receive it by email each Monday, email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com. To stop the bulletin, reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field. More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/. We are also on TwitterBlueskyFacebook and Substack, and the bulletin is stored online here

News from Ukraine Bulletin 112

Monterey, California, 5 September 2024. Photo by the Russian Reader

In this week’s bulletin: Kursk offensive as seen by Ukrainian servicemen; plus “occupied education” in Kherson and secret Ukrainian schools in occupied territories; plus Basurka (comments by Russians on the war); plus more evidence of Russian war crimes

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Telegram’s muddy money (iStories, 6 September)

Russia fabricates insane charges against Ukrainian partisan first seized in Donetsk 8 years ago (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 5th)

“It’s getting harder to hide.” Children living under Russian occupation secretly attend Ukrainian schools (Meduza/iStories, 5 September)

Occupied education. How Russia distorts the minds of Ukrainian children in Kherson (Ukrainska Pravda, 4 September)

Russian propagandist and soldiers openly boast of looting homes in occupied Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 3rd)

Rustem Osmanov: unlawful, barbaric detention conditions (Crimea Human Rights Group, 2 September)

Russian FSB come for 70-year-old mother of imprisoned Crimean Tatar civic journalist Seiran Saliyev (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 2nd)

Court in Russia rules that 20-year sentence against Ukrainian POW for defending Mariupol is not long enough (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 2nd)

News from the front:

“We will meet the most resistance in Kursk.” The Kursk offensive through the eyes of three Ukrainian servicemen (Ukrainska Pravda, August 27th)

Ukraine’s Kursk offensive blitzed Russia with electronic warfare and drones (Forbes, 9 August)     

News from Ukraine – general:  

What draft laws for the protection of war victims should be adopted during the new session of the Verkhovna Rada – road map (Zmina, September 3rd)

The team of the film “Songs of Slow Burning Earth” organized an event at the Venice Film Festival to support Ukrainians in captivity (Center for Civil Liberties, September 6th)

“Degradation. Torture. Degradation”. A poetical video project in Kyiv talks about Russian captivity (Center for Civil Liberties, September 3rd)

Our friend Taras Bilous has been awarded the Daniel Singer Prize (Solidarity Collectives, September 3rd)

The historical branch of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine on the path to be banned (European Times, August 25th)

War-related news from Russia:

Rouslan Sidiki talks about his torture (Solidarity Zone, 6 September)

“I wanted to fight this horror.” The growing number of Russian teenagers going to prison on sabotage charges (Meduza, 6 September)

Kaliningrad: the situation before the elections (Posle.Media, 6 September)

Sasha Skochilenko: I just happened to be the winner of the ‘Hunger Games’ (The Art Newspaper, September  4th)

Basurka (some comments by Russians on the war) (The Russian Reader, 4 September)

Fundraiser for parcels – supporting prisoners in Russia who took direct action against the war (Solidarity Zone, 3 September)

Research of human rights abuses:

Savage torture and 11-year sentence for opposing Russia’s occupation of Kherson (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 6th)

Cultural genocide is hard to prove, says US professor (Tribunal for Putin, September 6th)

Ukraine lodges war crimes probe after Russians shoot unarmed Ukrainian POWs in the back (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, September 4th)

International solidarity:

On 7 September, our banner, “From Ukraine to Palestine, occupation is a crime”, was on the national march for a ceasefire in Gaza, carried by supporters of the Ukraine Information Group and Unite the Struggles (Ukraine Information Group, 8 September).  

Source: Facebook

This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. To receive it by email each Monday, email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com. To stop the bulletin, reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field. 

More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/. We are also on XFacebook and Substack, and the bulletin is stored online here

News from Ukraine Bulletin 101

Monterey, California, 7 June 2024. Photo by the Russian Reader

In this week’s bulletin: Ukraine and Palestine – Public discussion meeting on 11 Juneplus Life Under Occupation report; plus Russian assault on power stationsplus how Swiss peace summit could hurt Ukraine; discussion on Ukrainian punishment of ‘collaborators’plus Solidarity Zone’s support for Russian anti-war protesters.

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Kupiansk mayor who betrayed Ukraine injured in assassination attempt (Ukrainska Pravda, 8 June)

In occupied areas, Ukrainians refuse to give up their language (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 7 June)

Fake ‘trial’ incriminates Russia in abduction and torture of Ukrainian patriot Serhiy Kuris (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 7 June)

Crimean students’ grades lowered for not writing ‘thank you letters’ to Russian soldiers (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 4 June)

Occupied territories: Russian citizenship and propaganda (Zmina, 5 June)

‘Hero of Russia’ status for war crimes against Ukrainian civilians in Yahidne and Mariupol (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 3 June)

Life Under Occupation report (Alternative Human Rights Centre, May 2024)

The situation at the front:  

Weekly Ukraine war summary (The Insider, 8 June)

Overview from the front: Holding out for reinforcements (Meduza, 4 June)

Russian soldiers post video showing mock execution and other torment of Ukrainian PoWs (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 4 June)

News from Ukraine – general: 

Ukraine recovery could be a lifeline for children (Human Rights Watch, 7 June)

Human rights in Ukraine: punishment of businesses working under occupation: discussion (Zmina, 5 June)

Marianna Checheliuk emaciated and frail, but back in Ukraine after two years of torture in Russian captivity (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, 3 June)

War-related news from Russia:

Support the fundraiser for Ilya Baburin (Solidarity Zone, 7 June)

To Not Die as Slaves: Solidarity Zone’s Mission to Aid Russia’s Radical Anti-War Protesters (The Russian Reader, 2 June)

Analysis and comment:

Oil finances Putin’s war and Trump’s political ambitions (Svitlana Romanko and Oleh Savitsky, Euromaidan press, 8 June)

Georgia: Resisting authoritarianism (Posle Media, 6 June)

Swiss peace summit could end up harming Ukraine (Ukrainska Pravda, 5 June)

Power station bombing redoubles pressure on Ukraine (Foreign Policy in Focus, 5 June)

International solidarity:

Thanks from the front line for a car (Mick Antoniw, twitter, 8 June)

UK General Election 2024: help Ukraine win (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, 31 May)

Upcoming solidarity events:

Tuesday 11 June, 7.0pm: Discussion meeting: “From Ukraine to Palestine, occupation is a crime” – Tuesday 11 June, 7.00 pm. Marchmont Community Centre, 62 Marchmont Street, London WC1N 1AB, and on line. Register to attend on eventbrite here or register to participate on line here. Organised by the Ukraine Information Group.

This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. Please subscribe and tell friends. If people email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/We are also on twitterFacebook and Substackand the bulletin is stored on line here. To stop the bulletin, reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field. 

When the Soul Can’t Keep Silent

Aydyn Zhamidulov. Photo: Russian Defense Ministry via Kommersant

Kommersant has learned that a military court has begun hearing the criminal case against Senior Lieutenant Aydyn Zhamidulov, a platoon commander in the Airborne Troops, and his subordinate, Private Alexei Dorozhkin. The Russian Investigative Committee alleges that the men kidnapped a young woman who had threatened the officer that she would tell his wife about their relationship and took her to their unit’s temporary deployment point as a Ukrainian spy. There, they stabbed the victim to death and blew up her body in an attempt to conceal their crime. Zhamidulov gained renown for writing patriotic poems during his combat training and was shown reciting them on Telegram channels.

The criminal case against Senior Lieutenant Zhamidulov and Private Dorozhkin was submitted to the Southern District Military Court, sitting in Rostov-on-Don. The men are accused of the kidnapping and brutal murder of a resident of the Luhansk People’s Republic per articles 126.1, 105.2, 30.3, 33.4, and 244.2 of the Russian Criminal Code.

In the file of the case, as investigated by military investigation units at the Russian Investigative Committee, it is reported that Zhamidulov is twenty-eight years old, a native of Kazakhstan, and lived in the Pskov Region. He has a higher education, is married, and was raising two daughters.

In January 2022, Zhamidulov signed a contract with the Defense Ministry and, in the rank of senior lieutenant, served as commander of a parachute platoon in an airborne assault regiment of the famous 76th Airborne Division.

In late 2022, a video was widely circulated in social networks and the media in which Lieutenant Zhamidulov recited a poem of his own about the those involved in the special military operation. At the end of the recital, the officer stated that his family was proud of him and was waiting for him to come home.

Dorozhkin was mobilized on 1 January 2023. Ranked as a private, he served as a senior scout in the Airborne Troops.

According to investigators, at about eight p.m. on 13 January 2023, Zhamidulov and other military men, including Dorozhkin, were drinking hard alcoholic beverages at the Rainbow Cafe in Luhansk. About half an hour later, local resident Valentina Davronova, with whom Zhamidulov had previously been in an intimate relationship, entered the cafe.

A row broke out between the senior lieutenant and the twenty-three-year-old woman. Fearing that Ms. Davronova would report their relationship to his wife, Zhamidulov decided to deal with the young woman, the case file says. He told his subordinates that he would take Ms. Davronova to her current boyfriend.

The young woman was put in the back of a KamAZ truck, and when the truck arrived at the unit, Zhamidulov tied her hands with duct tape. Dorozhkin, who went with them, was ordered by the senior lieutenant to tape Valentina’s eyes, which he did.

To avoid questions from his subordinates and make his actions look legitimate, the investigators note, Zhamidulov told them that Ms. Davronova had served in the Ukrainian army from 2018 to 2021 and had tattoos featuring Ukrainian symbols on her body. He also alleged that she was engaged in intelligence on behalf of the Ukrainian armed forces.

The young woman was taken to a soldier’s bathhouse, where Zhamidulov stabbed her about two dozen times in different parts of her body. At that time, the commander of a reconnaissance platoon combat vehicle, Sergeant Roman Pleshcheyev, entered the bathhouse (his case will be tried separately). Zhamidulov ordered him to finish off the victim. Not wanting to kill her, but fearing negative consequences on the part of the senior lieutenant, Plescheyev stabbed Ms. Davronova with his knife in the area of her left shoulder and right leg.

At 12:20 a.m., Dorozhkin entered the bathhouse, and Zhamidulov instructed him to finish what he had started. Pleshcheyev left the room and Dorozhkin killed the victim by stabbing her in the area of her heart.

Having made sure that the young woman was dead, Zhamidulov ordered his subordinates to take the body outside the temporary deployment point and detonate it with three F-1 grenades so that the deceased could not be identified and the cause of her death could not be determined.

Nevertheless, the crime was solved literally while the trail was still hot. All three defendants were detained and then remanded in custday by a military court.

The case is now in preliminary hearings, and is expected to be considered on the merits this summer. Zhamidulov’s lawyer Natalia Kokhan refused to comment on the case without vetting her answers with her client.

Source: Kristina Fedichkin, “Paratrooper poet accused of murder,” Kommersant, 29 May 2024. Translated by the Russian Reader


[…]

WHEN THE SOUL CAN’T KEEP SILENT

Aydyn Zhamidulov. Photo: Komsomolskaya Pravda

Aydyn Zhamidulov was mobilized from the Orenburg Region. As a civilian he worked as a welder, but now he serves in an Airborne Troops reconnaissance unit. He has a wife, two daughters, and his parents waiting for him at home.

“I was retrained in my specialty. In the short period of mobilization combat training, everything — camouflage, identifying the enemy, working with topographic maps, artillery fire — is very easy to learn,” Zhamidulov said.

All of the things he saw and his interactions with his fellow soldiers inspired Aydyn to write poems. They are plain but honest and poignant, straight from the heart.

Always our ancestors fought evil.
They wrote history with blood, with the pen.
They weren’t afraid to go all the way.
They removed shackles, they united hearts.
Now, our brothers, it’s our turn
To defend our country, our home, and our people.
To do justice, to open their eyes.
The enemy is in deep,
like a needle under the skin.
Let us strike down the puppeteers,
the servants of evil,
Who pull the strings
Of bewildered people,
Of gray-haired mothers
shedding tears
For them, the lives of people
are just a game.
We must put a stop to this
once and for all!

Source: Yulia Reutova, “Victory will be ours! Komsomolka found out what the mobilized are talking about,” Komsomolskaya Pravda, 15 December 2022. Translated by the Russian Reader. Thanks to The Insider for the link.

News from Ukraine Bulletin 84

Monterey, California, 13 February 2024. Photo by the Russian Reader

News from Ukraine Bulletin 84 (12 February 2024)

A Digest of News from Ukrainian sources

In this week’s bulletin: War, fascisisation and resistance in Russia; two years of war by a Ukrainian feminist; more evidence of Russian torture and secret trials and theft of property.

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Russian FSB tortures three Ukrainians for ‘saboteur plot’ arrests in occupied Crimea  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 9th)

Russian propaganda turns the elimination of its officials in occupied Lysychansk into ‘a monstrous attack on a bakery’  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 9th)

‘I live in a modular town and weave nets,’ — a resident of Borodianka (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 8th)

Huge mass ‘sentences’ after fake trial of Ukrainian POWs whom Russia accused of its own war crimes (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 8th)

Seven years of hell for supporting Ukraine in Russian-controlled ‘Donetsk republic’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 6th)

Russians plan to teach schoolchildren in temporarily occupied territories to assemble UAVs (Ukrainska Pravda, February 5th)

‘I realised that it’s a kilometre to run through unexploded shells to get to the well…’ — Chronicles of occupied Izium  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 5th)

Russian invaders move to strip Ukrainians forced to flee occupied Berdiansk of their homes (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 6th)

Russia has turned Crimea into a huge prison for political prisoners and hostages from Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 5th)

News from Ukraine – general:  

To the President of Ukraine V.O. Zelenskyi, about the change of army command (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 9th)

Beyond Greener Grass: Strategies Towards Ukrainian Transnational Cultural Reconstruction  (Cedos, February 9th)

Our people are at home: 207 Ukrainians were returned from captivity (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 6th)

The Housing Leadership Lab  (Cedos, February 6th)

“Ukraine is a left-wing, anti-authoritarian project”  (Ukraine Solidarity EU, February 4th)

“Tensions are building in Ukrainian society as a result of neoliberal policies imposed by the government”   (Ukraine Solidarity EU, February 3rd)

2 years of war, a Ukrainian feminist point of view  (Ukraine Solidarity EU, February 1st)

Analysis and comment:

Suspicious secrecy over crash of military transport plane which Russia claims was carrying Ukrainian POWs  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 7th)

Ukrainian Parliament should become more open to the media and the public  (Zmina, February 6th)

International Court of Justice rules that Russia must answer over Ukraine’s Genocide case (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 5th)

War, fascization, and resistance: Perspectives on Russian imperialism (Links, January 23rd)

Research of human rights abuses:

Lisne from the air: damage and destruction (Tribunal for Putin, February 9th)

The Butchers of Vovchansk: Suspects named  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, February 8th)

“Before sharing your own story, it is crucial to hear first the story of those with whom you are talking” — Oleksandra Romantsova (Centre for Civil Liberties, February 8th)

Justice for War Crimes  (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, February 7th)

War-related news from Russia:

(Hopeless) Nadezhdin. The Kremlin did not allow a loyal “oppositional” and Ukrainophobic candidate to participate in the election  (Opora, February 9th)

Russian election: “Nothing happens in social life without human effort” (Posle Media, 7 February)

Campaign for political prisoner Azat Miftakhov (January 29th)

Upcoming solidarity actions in the UK:

The future of Ukraine.  Thursday 15 February, 2024, 18:30 – 20:00 Location: Europe House, 32 Smith Square, London. 

Saturday 24 February, 2pm. Two years resisting Russia’s invasion. Assemble Marble Arch and march to Trafalgar Square. Called by Support Ukraine / London Euromaidan, supported by Ukraine Solidarity Campaign.

Saturday 24 February, 4.0pm UK time. An online “assembly against the war and its logic”. Organised by Permanent Assembly Against the War.

Thursday 7 March – Evening –  Fundraiser Showing of 20 Days in Mariupol – for medical aid appeal for at Novovlynysnk Central Hospital at The Garden Cinema, London.

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We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.

This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/. We are also on twitter, and the bulletin is also stored on line here.

News from Ukraine Bulletin 70

Pacific Grove, California, 2 July 2023. Photo by the Russian Reader

News from Ukraine Bulletin 70 (30 October 2023)

A Digest of News from Ukrainian sources

In this week’s bulletin: More evidence of Russian torture; plus UN documentation of Russian rape, torture, indiscriminate bombing of civilians and other war crimes. And much more

News from the territories occupied by Russia:  

Russia drops all pretence in ‘trial’ of Ukrainian hostages imprisoned since 2018 in occupied Donbas  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 27th)

Massive increase in Russian spending on its war against Ukraine and indoctrination on occupied territory  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 27th)

Russia stages new ‘trial’ to increase sentence against 64-year-old Ukrainian imprisoned for affirming that Crimea is Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 26th)

Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant engineer held and tortured by Russian invaders for over a year  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group,October 25th)

Fake ‘secret witness’ exposed in Russia’s politically timed persecution of Crimean Solidarity journalist and other Crimean Tatars  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 24th)

‘More than 20 bullets were fired into my car’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 23)

Russia stages illegal raids against Ukrainians as supposed ‘foreigners’ in occupied Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group,October 24th)

Crimean artist Bohdan Ziza’s 15-year ‘terrorism’ sentence for opposing Russia’s war against Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 23rd)

News from Ukraine – general:  

Miners’ solidarity mission – Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Ukraine 26 October

Ukraine’s desperate search for war funding hits local budgets (Open Democracy, October 26th)

At least 508 Ukrainian children killed by Russia (Ukrainska Pravda, October 23rd)

Analysis and comment: 

How the Karabakh conflict might impact Moldova, Georgia, Ukraine – The Insider, 18 October

Research of human rights abuses: 

‘I see no path to reconciliation until evil is called evil’  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 27th)

As long as there is any hope, we should look for missing persons  (Tribunal for Putin, October 27th)

The destruction of Cherkaski Tyshky viewed from the air (Tribunal for Putin, October 26th)

Dreams turned to ashes  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 26th)

Life is like a horror movie (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 25th)

‘A whole family died in a neighbouring house’ — resident of Sievierodonetsk  (Tribunal for Putin, October 25th)

Center for Civil Liberties took part in the conference “Justice and Accountability – New Ways of Thinking”, dedicated to war crimes in Ukraine and Syria  (Centre for Civil Liberties, October 24th)

‘We were bombed every day’  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 24th)

UN documents Russian rape, torture, indiscriminate bombing of civilians and other war crimes in Ukraine  (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, October 23rd)

ZMINA discusses rescue of Crimean political prisoners in Brussels (Zmina, October20th)

How migration was affected by Russia’s targeted shelling of Kyiv in May 2023 – Opora, 17 October

War-related news from Russia and Belarus:

How residents of southern Siberia show support for a war thousands of miles away – Meduza, 26 October 

International solidarity: upcoming events

Commons Conference – Dialogues of the Peripheries – November 4th-5th

Eating in crisis: food sovereignty, war and environment – November 4th, 10.00. Registration here 

International (in)security: building solidarity in a rupturing world? – November 4th, 13.00. Registration here 

Women during the war: between defense of the country and lack of social security – November 4th, 16.00. Registration here.  

Labour rights in conditions of war and mass migration: how to work under attack?  November 5th, 10.00. Registration here.  

Approved or refused: how the international refugee system has to work? – November 5th, 13.00. Registration here.  

Authoritarian regimes and imperialist aggression – November 5th. Registration here.  

Ukrainian Feminist Kitchen #4

October 30th at 18.00. REGISTRATION HERE 

Art show fundraiser for Ukraine

29th October – 10th November. Details here.

From Ukraine to Palestine, Occupation is a Crime

2nd November, 18.00.  Sponsored by the Ukraine Solidarity Network. Details here.

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This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. More information at https://ukraine-solidarity.org/. We are also on Twitter. We aim to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. Send items for inclusion to 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com. The bulletin is also stored online here

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Rasha parasha

“A Russian national passport = social stability and security. Kherson Region: We’re together with Russia!” reads this purported (but, sadly, all too believable) billboard in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian city of Kherson, on which someone has written “Russia [rasha] is a shit hole [parasha], ZSU [Armed Forces of Ukraine],” in the lower right corner. Source: Nash Kherson (“Our Kherson”), Facebook, 20 August 2022

People and Nature: Ukrainians Face Deportation and Conscription by Russian Forces

Ukrainian activists in the Eastern Human Rights Group are using social media to build up a register of people forcibly deported from Russian-occupied areas.

A bot has been launched on Telegram (@come_back_to_ukraine_bot) to contact citizens removed to Russia.

Deporting people against their will is a war crime. International and local human rights organisations, and the Ukrainian government, say there is mounting evidence that Russia is doing so on a large scale.

The Russian defence ministry said on 18 June that more than 1.9 million people, including 307,000 children, had been evacuated from Ukraine to Russia since the full-scale invasion on 24 February. Ukrainian activists deny Russian claims that all evacuees have left Ukraine voluntarily.

“If we don’t find how to help them, Russia will erase the Ukrainian identity of these children,” Oleksandra Matviichuk of the Ukrainian Centre for Civil Liberties responded.

The Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group in April protested against a scheme to resettle residents of Mariupol in the most inhospitable and distant areas of Russia.

Halya Coynash reported that the Mariupol council had drawn attention to a leaflet distributed to Mariupol residents “inviting” them to the Russian Far East. She commented:

First, they destroy a successful and warm city on the Sea of Azov, and then they drive its residents to Siberia or Sakhalin to work as cheap labour.

Mariupol’s mayor, Vadim Boichenko, said that he has a list of 33,500 residents forcibly deported either to Russia or to the Donbass “republics,” and is coordinating rescue efforts.

Coynash also published details of the “filtration” of residents in the occupied areas by Russian forces, with those considered “unreliable” being sent to detention camps in the Donbass “republics.”

Ukraine’s human rights ombudswoman Lyudmyla Denisova said last month that 210,000 children, and more than 1 million other Ukrainians, had been deported against their will. Reuters reported these numbers, saying they could not independently verify them, and that the Kremlin had not responded to a request for comment.

Iryna Venediktova, Ukraine’s prosecutor general, said earlier this month that a war crimes case was being built up relating to the deportation of children to Russia.

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), in its report on human rights violations in Ukraine between 24 February and 12 April, said that its Mission had received “numerous consistent reports” on forced deportations from the occupied territories to Russia. It said that Russia had denied these accusations, but added:

If (some of) these deportations were forcible (including because Russia created a coercive environment in which those civilians had no other choice than to leave for Russia) and as they necessarily concerned civilians who had fallen into the power of Russia as an occupying power, this violates in each case International Humanitarian Law and constitutes a war crime.

Mateusz Morawiecki, prime minister of Poland, said on a visit to Kyiv this month that deportations – which recalled Poles’ experience under the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union – are “an exceptional crime, about which there is almost complete silence in western Europe.”

The Eastern Human Rights Group, set up in 2014 by labour activists in Donbass and now operating from Kyiv, decided to work on a register of deported citizens after appealing unsuccessfully for the Ukrainian government to take action.

“Our team lobbied repeatedly for setting up a state structure to deal with repatriation, but, as happens quite often, the government did not listen,” the group stated on 13 June. “We decided to take action on the issue ourselves, and at a non-government level we are working on the issue of repatriating Ukrainians.”

□ Two all-European public zoom calls about the Russian-occupied areas are being held on Monday 4 July and Thursday 14 July, on which Ukrainian activists will report on what can be done to support civil society there. The initiative is supported by the European Network in Solidarity with Ukraine. You need to register in advance to participate.

□ The Eastern Human Rights Group has also reported on forcible military mobilisation in the Donbass “republics,” and use of the death penalty there. Here are three recent Facebook posts. With thanks to Anna Yegorova for the translations.


Forced mobilisation on the rise again (15 June)

For the last three weeks, forced mobilisation in the occupied territories of Luhansk and Donetsk regions has slowed down, due to active protests by mothers, sisters, and spouses of the forcibly mobilized.

However, the Ministry of National Security in the Luhansk and Donetsk “people’s republics” swiftly suppressed women’s protests, as we recorded the detention of several women in Yenakievo and Rovenky.

Since last Saturday, military patrols searching for men of conscription age in the cities of occupied Donbas have become more active with men being detained in the streets again. (The detentions are not as massive as in March, but that is understandable: there are simply not as many men as there were in March.)

This new stage of forced mobilisation is associated with the need to send new manpower to fight in Donbass.

Forced mobilisation has again affected workers at enterprises, and enterprise managers have spoken out against it. The administrations of the “Luhansk people’s republic” and “Donetsk people’s republic” said that “construction brigades” [a term dating back to the Soviet times, usually designating student groups as “volunteers” to work on farms and plants] from the Russian Federation would soon arrive to replace the workers [so that the latter could be send to the battlefield].


“People’s republic” soldiers defecting to Ukraine (23 June)

Over the past three weeks, the so-called “people’s militia” of the Luhansk and Donetsk “people’s republics” has increased military patrols in the temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine, due to the increasing number of defections from AK-1 and AK-2 units. Forcibly mobilised people, even after they have been dressed in uniform, seek opportunities to escape from the Russian convoy escorting them to the front line.

Frequent defections became public thanks to women in [the occupied territories of] Donetsk and Luhansk reporting to Vera Yastrebova, the head of the Eastern Human Rights group.

One woman said that her brother escaped with a group of mobilised men on the way to the front line, and now they are wanted by the local “authorities.” There are also cases when mobilised residents of the two “people’s republics” jump off trains that take them to the front line, following a brief training in the Russian Federation.

Over the past three weeks, there have been more than 100 cases of defections from the “LPR” and “DPR,” a source from the DPR told us.


Luhansk “people’s republic” is about to introduce death penalty (24 June)

By Vera Yastrebova. A working group is preparing to change the criminal “law” of the Luhansk “people’s republic” to introduce a new type of punishment – the death penalty, I have been told by sources there.

A decision was first made back in 2021, when the Kremlin decided to create unitary “legislation” for the Donetsk and Luhansk “people’s republics,” and essentially rewrite the laws in Luhansk to match those of Donetsk. But they haven’t had time to do that.

Now the principle has been agreed, and changes are being developed very quickly. The haste is due to the fact that the Luhansk “people’s republic” will be able to apply the death penalty to Ukrainian prisoners of war.

The issue of the “death penalty” will be further pushed by the Kremlin, in order to force Western countries to engage in direct negotiations with the leaders of the “LPR” and “DPR,” my sources say.

□ Why is Ukrainian resistance invisible to you? An appeal to supporters of the Stop the War Coalition

□ ‘We are surviving, but not living’ under Russian occupation – People & Nature, 13 June

There will be all-European public zoom calls, on Monday 4 July and Thursday 14 July, with Ukrainian activists supporting people in the occupied areas. Details and link to registration here.


Source: Simon Pirani, “Ukrainians face forcible deportation and conscription by Russian forces,” People and Nature, 27 June 2022. Reprinted here with the author’s kind permission