Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) has urged Russia-backed separatists to release blogger Stanislav Aseyev, who has been held in eastern Ukraine since July 2017.
Aseyev, an RFE/RL contributor who wrote under the pen name Stanislav Vasin, disappeared in Ukraine’s Donetsk region on June 2, 2017. Weeks later, Amnesty International said it had received information that the journalist was being held by the separatists who control parts of the region.
“Stanislav has been held virtually incommunicado for two years because of his unflinching reporting from his native Donetsk,” said RFE/RL Acting President Daisy Sindelar on July 17. “I know I speak on behalf of a growing number of rights advocates, government officials, lawmakers, and journalists in deploring his detention and demanding his freedom.”
In July 2018, a friend and former lawmaker, Yehor Firsov, said Aseyev had declared a hunger strike and was being "kept in a damp room, sick, but does not receive the necessary medications" while under separatist custody.
In August, a bipartisan U.S. congressional caucus called for Aseyev's immediate release, describing him as "one of the few independent journalists to remain in the region under separatist control to provide objective reporting."
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (Republican-Florida) also called for Aseyev’s release in July 2018.
The media rights group Reporters Without Borders has also voiced concern about Aseyev's treatment, which it called "increasingly disturbing."
RFE/RL has also urged the release of Ukrainian Service contributor Oleh Halazyuk, who has been held by Russia-backed separatists in Donetsk since August 2017.
Watchdog
Wednesday 17 July 2019
A Moscow court has prolonged by three months the pretrial detention of 24 Ukrainian sailors detained by Russian forces along with their three naval vessels in November near the Kerch Strait, which links the Black Sea and Sea of Azov.
The Lefortovo district court ruled on July 17 that 13 of the sailors must stay in detention until October 24, while the remaining 11 will be held until October 26.
Russia has held the Ukrainian sailors since its forces fired on, boarded, and seized their vessels near the Kerch Strait on November 25.
Moscow claims the Ukrainian vessels illegally entered Russian territorial waters near Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula that Russia occupied and took over in 2014.
The sailors face up to six years in prison if convicted.
The United States and other Western countries have called for the Ukrainian sailors' release, calling their detainment illegal.
Russia moved swiftly to seize control over Crimea after Moscow-friendly Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was pushed from power in Kyiv by the pro-European Maidan protest movement in February 2014.
Putin's government sent troops without insignia to the peninsula, seized key buildings, took control of the regional legislature, and staged a referendum denounced as illegitimate by at least 100 countries.
Russia also fomented unrest and backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, where some 13,000 people have been killed in the ensuing conflict since April 2014.
With reporting by TASS and Interfax
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