"This is how these crimes are committed in Crimea": The systematic practice of keeping civilians in "incommunicado" status
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"People are detained, the fact of their detention is not acknowledged, their whereabouts are not disclosed, and no charges are brought against them. They remain completely cut off from the outside world — in a state of incommunicado. These are no longer isolated cases, but a systemic practice aimed at concealing the crimes of the occupying forces," commented Ihor Kotelianets, Head of the Association of Relatives of Political Prisoners of the Kremlin.

A new report by Suspilne Crimea presents stories of civilians who have gone missing in the temporarily occupied peninsula. Parents are sent to torture chambers, children — to orphanages. All of this happens without trial, without contact, without explanation.

The occupying authorities have created conditions under which people literally disappear — and their families do not even know in which city or prison to look for them. This is a blatant violation of international humanitarian law.

We demand:

  • An end to the practice of incommunicado detention;
  • Immediate notification of relatives about the location of abducted individuals;
  • Access for lawyers to places of detention;
  • A response from international human rights mechanisms;
  • The establishment of a unified coordination center in Ukraine for families of the disappeared.

Watch the full report by Suspilne:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zf6Oatwujx8

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