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The Tribunal for Putin (T4P) global initiative was set up in response to the all-out war launched by Russia against Ukraine in February 2022.

Russian invaders seize Ukrainian journalist, take her to occupied Donetsk ‘for trial’

31.03.2022   
Halya Coynash
Zaporizhzhia journalist Iryna Dubchenko has been taken prisoner by the invaders who told her that, if she didn't have a small child, they would have shot her on the spot
Iryna Dubchenko

Zaporizhzhia journalist Iryna Dubchenko has been taken prisoner by the Russian soldiers instilling terror in areas currently under their occupation, and is believed to have been taken by them to occupied Donetsk.  The Russian invaders (or Russian-controlled collaborators from the Russian proxy ‘Donetsk people’s republic’, or ‘DPR’) accuse her of providing support and shelter for Ukrainian soldiers who, unlike them, are defending their own country,.  They claimed that they were taking her for ‘investigative measures’ and ‘trial’ to occupied Donetsk.  Even before the war, ‘DPR’ .  was holding several hundred Ukrainian POWs and civilians prisoner, often merely for their pro-Ukrainian position..   

Iryna has a small daughter who will soon be turning four, whom her parents thankfully took away to (relative) safety in Zaporizhzhia a few weeks earlier. She had remained in her native village/town, Rozivka, to care for her elderly grandmother who is bedridden.  She is a well-known journalist, who has worked for various media in the Zaporizhzhia oblast, as well as for the national publication UNIAN. 

Dubchenko’s abduction was first reported by fellow journalist Yakiv Noskov on 28 March, with more details since provided by Iryna’s sister, Oleksandra Dubchenko.  The latter issued a moving appeal, calling on Ukraine’s President and the international community to help secure the release of her sister.  One particularly chilling detail is that Iryna had called on 26 March and said that some local person had told the invaders about her work, both as a volunteer and a journalist. This was the last time her family heard from her.

Oleksandra has explained to the National Union of Journalists that her parents discovered that Iryna had been taken prisoner when they arrived in Rozivka on 28 March to get her and her grandmother to safety. Neighbours did not know where she had gone,, and her parents turned to the so-called ‘military command’ set up in the town by the occupiers. They first claimed that the Russians did not take women prisoner, but then admitted that she had been ‘arrested’ on 26 March.

The invaders accuse Dubchenko of having hidden a gravely wounded Ukrainian soldier at her home. During their search of the home,  Dubchenko said that she was looking after her husband, but was told that they knew everything about her relatives and about her journalist  activities.  According to her sister, Iryna was told: “You’re lucky that you have a small children, or we would have shot you on the spot”.   Such ‘concern’ has not stopped the Russians from killing at least 140 children so far, including some shot dead when trying to flee the shelling.  Oleksandr Dubchenko told NUJ that her parents tried to get Iryna and her grandmother to safety back on 7 March, however their car was shot at as they tried to reach Rozivka, and they were forced to return to Zaporizhzhia. 

Iryna Dubchenko is one of two journalists seized by the invaders or whose whereabouts are unknown.  There has been no contact with Max Levin, a very well-known photojournalist, since 13 March, and since he disappeared during fierce fighting in the Kyiv oblast, there are very real concerns for his safety. 

The same is true of an ever-mounting number of public officials and civic activists in areas that the Russians or their proxy cronies are occupying.  These methods of terror are quite deliberate, aimed at silencing opposition and terrifying the population into submission.  It is vital that voices are heard in defence of those, like Iryna Dubchenko, taken prisoner, and very likely tortured, for her civic position and her journalist activities.

See also:

Russian invaders abduct Mayor of Prymorsk Oleksandr Koshelevych after first taking his elderly father hostage

Russian invaders intensify abductions and terror against Ukrainian civic activists and journalists

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