Home Focus Waterboarding, electrocution and a kidnapped son: Ex-general tells of torture in Kherson

Waterboarding, electrocution and a kidnapped son: Ex-general tells of torture in Kherson

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A destroyed church in the village of Posad-Pokrovske. On its retreat from Kherson, the Russian army destroyed critical infrastructure in the city, including electricity and water supplies. Now, the constant Russian shellings, the lack of electricity, and running water in the town during the winter season has forced many locals to flee Kherson. Ukrainian troops entered Kherson on 11 November after the Russian army had withdrawn from the city which they captured in the early stage of the conflict, shortly after Russian troops had entered Ukraine in February 2022. (Photo: EPA-EFE/Roman Pilipey)

By: Francis Farrel / The Kyiv Independent

Standing in line in liberated Kherson for a box of pasta and canned goods with a handsome black dog on a lead, Valerii Hnedov doesn’t look like someone who only three weeks prior was languishing in a Russian torture chamber.

Cutting a proud figure at well over six feet tall, the 72-year-old Hnedov was amicable and quick to invite conversation.

“Of course I’m happy the Russians are gone, they took so much from me,” he told the Kyiv Independent. “My son has disappeared, we haven’t heard from him in a month, since we were both in the Hole (prison) together.”

Hnedov, a former Soviet intelligence officer, spent six weeks in near unlivable conditions in Russian custody during the occupation of Kherson.

Read further HERE.

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