Send Letter eng
Cards

Kostiantyn Zinovkin

Kostiantyn Zinovkin

Date of abduction: May 12, 2023

Place of abduction: Melitopol, Zaporizhzhia region

 

When Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, 29-year-old Kostiantyn Zinovkin stayed in his native Melitopol to take care of his mother and grandmother. Very quickly, the invaders occupied the city and began abducting people and searching their homes. On May 12, 2023, Kostiantyn left home and never returned. However, three unidentified men in civilian clothes broke into his apartment, interrogated his mother and grandmother, and searched the house. They said Konstantin was detained “for violating the regime” and would be released soon. For about a month, the family did not know what happened to him, and then the occupiers accused Kostiantyn of terrorism and an attempt to blow up a person.

“For you to understand, we have not eaten meat for many years because we do not want animals to suffer because of us. To blow up a man is very wild and unlike him,” says his wife, Lucienne.

In July 2023, the Russians took Konstantin to Detention Center #2 in Chongar. There, hostages are kept under round-the-clock video surveillance and tortured. In May, the Russians started “criminal proceedings” against Konstantin Zinovkin. Every few months, he is brought to the “courts,” where the preventive measure is extended, but neither his wife nor his mother knows the details of the hearings. The last hearing took place on January 25. Since then, Zinovkin’s family has no information about him.

0 Comments

Leave a comment

Your e-mail address will not be published. Mandatory fields are marked *

Relevant publications
More articles
Advocacy
“Torture and persecution of Ukrainians by Russia should be investigated as crimes against humanity” — human rights activists

In Warsaw, MIHR, Zmina, and OMCT presented a large-scale study of Russia's crimes in the occupied territories of Ukraine. It is about the torture and persecution of Ukrainians on political and ideological grounds. During the discussion, they also talked about the medical and legal documentation of torture, with PHR sharing its experience.

8 October 2024

Advocacy
Russia must be brought to accountability for crimes against humanity: a new investigation was presented in Warsaw

During the annual OSCE human rights conference in the Polish capital, MIHR presented a large-scale investigation into how Russia persecutes Ukrainians. This is its second part. It not only describes in detail the crimes committed by the Russian military in Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Sumy regions but also records the places where Ukrainians are held, the ways they are taken to Russia, and the names and military units involved in these crimes.

3 October 2024

Advocacy
“We need a hybrid court that will prosecute Russians. Without this, there will be no effective justice”, — a new tribunal was called for at the OSCE Human Dimension Conference

Today, within the OSCE Annual Human Dimension Conference framework, the Ukraine 5 AM Coalition organized a public discussion ”In Search of Justice. What should the architecture of justice in Ukraine look like based on the experience of victims and the needs of the justice system.”

2 October 2024

More articles