Drowning out the screams
A former Ukrainian prisoner of war describes the torture he withstood during almost two years in Russian captivity

Despite being just 24 years old, Andriy Kulko, a former PE teacher from Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, has already experienced a great deal in life. Enlisting in the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) the year before the war started, he found himself in the inferno of Mariupol for three months in early 2022, where he was eventually captured by Russian forces. He then spent one year, eight months and 21 days being tortured in Russian captivity, a torment that only ended when he was returned to Ukraine in a prisoner exchange in January.
“They’d put a plastic bag over your head and choke you. Then they’d beat you with rubber truncheons, punch you, kick you, taser you.”
“Head down, eyes on the floor, hands behind your back. Every day for 11 months.”
“We figured out how to talk at least a little, as without talking you could really go crazy.”
“We tried not to lose heart, although it didn’t always work because we were constantly told: ‘Ukraine doesn’t exist anymore, no one is waiting for you, no one needs you’.”
“I had hallucinations: I’d hallucinate lights or have music from the Russian prison constantly playing in my head.”
“I think justice will eventually be served. I really hope it will.”


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