‘Some go crazy within half an hour’
A Soviet dissident who spent years in solitary confinement on how political prisoners are punished in contemporary Russia

In light of the increasing use of punishment cells within Russian prisons to torture high-profile political prisoners, Novaya Europe spoke to veteran Soviet dissident Alexander Podrabinek, who spent over eight years in prison camps in northeastern Siberia, almost entirely in solitary confinement.
“The treatment was much harsher in Soviet times. Standards were lower, and prisoners in punishment cells were only fed every other day.”
“They can stick someone in solitary at the drop of a hat.”
“Some people bang on the door or the bars and try to get out because they start going crazy in solitary within half an hour.”

My enemy’s enemy
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Cold case
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Cold war
Kyiv residents are enduring days without power as Russian attacks and freezing winter temperatures put their lives at risk

Scraping the barrel
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Beyond the Urals
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Family feud
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Cries for help
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Deliverance
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Watch your steppe
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