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Police and inmates are seen outside maximum security IK-15 near Angarsk in April 2020 when a mass uprising of prisoners occurred. Since that time, activists and prisoners' relatives have said that hundreds of prisoners were tortured to extract confessions of organizing the riot.
Police and inmates are seen outside maximum security IK-15 near Angarsk in April 2020 when a mass uprising of prisoners occurred. Since that time, activists and prisoners' relatives have said that hundreds of prisoners were tortured to extract confessions of organizing the riot.

Earlier this month, the nongovernmental Gulagu.net -- which tracks human rights abuses by Russian police and in Russian prisons -- disclosed the existence of more than 40 gigabytes of video material graphically documenting beatings, rape, and torture of inmates in prisons and pretrial detention centers.

Within hours of the story breaking, the Federal Prison Service (FSIN) announced it had fired the head of the prison service in the Saratov region, as well as several other top prison officials there. FSIN announced it was investigating the torture videos, which were allegedly shot in prisons and detention centers in the Irkutsk, Vladimir, and Saratov regions between 2018 and 2020.

(Because of the graphic nature of the videos, RFE/RL has decided not to post them or to link to other sites that have done so.)

"Torture again," Lyubov Sobol, a lawyer and activist associated with imprisoned opposition leader Aleksei Navalny, wrote on Telegram on October 8. "Irkutsk Remand Prison No. 1 (SIZO-1) is the main torture center of the country. One of the perpetrators had admitted on camera to everything and speaks about the torture and rape of prisoners. This is pure hell. The whole FSIN system needs to be dismantled and prosecuted. Fascists."

Sobol was referring to former Irkutsk SIZO-1 inmate Denis Golikov, who told Gulagu.net that he was part of a gang of some 30 "razrabotchiki" -- a noun based on the Russian verb "to work over" that has quickly become common usage as a result of the torture videos -- whose members tortured hundreds of prisoners at the direction of prison officials.

"At the request of prosecutors, detainees who refused to 'cooperate' with investigators were sent to us," Golikov said in his video statement. “We were forced to 'work' with them so they would give the 'necessary' testimony that investigators wanted.

People would scream for hours that they were being murdered…. You'd sign anything just to avoid listening to those screams -- to say nothing about when they started working on you."

"In exchange, they promised not to touch me," Golikov added. "And the investigator promised to somehow 'settle matters' with the judge to get me parole."

Vladimir Matushkeyev is an entrepreneur from Irkutsk who served time at Irkutsk SIZO-1, the main pretrial detention center in the eastern Siberian city. He told RFE/RL that during his time in custody, prison workers extorted money from him on threat of torture and rape.

"I gave the money to an FSIN officer -- 30,000 rubles [$420] for food and steroids for the cell's senior razrabotchik, Denis Golikov, and other torturers," Matushkeyev said. "After the rapes, the prisoners were forced to sign false confessions, self-incriminations, and also to 'cooperate' further with investigators -- that is, to give false testimony not only against themselves but against other prisoners, too. They were blackmailed by the fact that their abuse was recorded, and they threatened to release that material."

'My Brain Was Boiling': RFE/RL Freelancer Describes Agonizing Torture By Russian Jailers
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In his testimony to Gulagu.net, Golikov said that he was given steroids by FSIN guards and that he nearly doubled his body mass while he was in custody. In their commentary, Gulagu.net wrote that guards "disfigured him with drugs and steroids and turned him into a torture machine fueled by steroids."

Matushkeyev also told RFE/RL that, under threat of violence, he agreed to participate in the torture of other inmates under the supervision of FSIN guards.

I still don't understand how I managed to get out alive. It is a miracle I survived."

"I was in the 'working over' isolation cells for more than a year and participated in tortures," he said. "I saw how SIZO-1 operatives gave Denis Golikov a video recorder through the food slot and how Golikov and others recorded the tortures and rape.

"Afterward, they gave the recorder back to the operative as a report of their special operation to collect compromising material," he added.

In Russian prison culture, if an inmate is known to have been raped, he is assigned to the lowest caste in an internal hierarchy and given the dirtiest and most humiliating tasks, such as cleaning out the toilets and sewers.

"In order to survive, I paid more than 30,000 rubles [$420] every week to an operative," Matushkeyev said.

Gulagu.net founder Vladimir Osechkin told RFE/RL that based on Golikov's statement, testimony from three Irkutsk SIZO-1 employees whose identities have been withheld, at least 10 other razrabotchiki, and 30 tortured inmates, the NGO estimates that more than 400 inmates underwent torture at Irkutsk SIZO-1.

"More than 100 of those 400 endured depraved, violent acts," Osechkin said.

One of the torture victims, a prisoner who served two stints in Irkutsk SIZO-1 in 2014 and 2018, as well as serving time in two of the region's prisons, IK-14 and IK-15, and who asked that his name be withheld, described his experiences to RFE/RL.

"Both times I was in the SIZO, I was immediately handed over to the razrabotchiki," the former prisoner said. "I had already been convicted of robbery, and I was waiting there to be shipped to the prison. Nonetheless, the razrabotchiki beat me and kicked me until I was all bruised. There was no reason for them to do this. They just wanted to get out some aggression.

"They were black from their bruises. There wasn't any white skin on them. Af"But when they needed to beat out a confession, they had other tortures," the prisoner added. "People would scream for hours that they were being murdered…. You'd sign anything just to avoid listening to those screams -- to say nothing about when they started working on you."

They were black from their bruises. There wasn't any white skin on them."

The prisoner was doing time at maximum security IK-15 near Angarsk in April 2020 when a mass uprising of prisoners occurred. Since that time, activists and prisoners' relatives have said that hundreds of prisoners were tortured to extract confessions of organizing the riot.

"I still don't understand how I managed to get out alive. It is a miracle I survived," the prisoner said.

He said that masked FSIN officers came to the prison and "beat everyone."

"And they were raping people right there in the prison, although not as many as in the SIZO," he added, saying the officers wanted "to take revenge."

"After several months, some of those who'd been taken to solitary or moved to other prisons for 'reeducation' started to return," the prisoner said. "They were black from their bruises. There wasn't any white skin on them. After their return from the SIZO to IK-15, nearly one-quarter of all the inmates were in the lowest caste. More than 1,000 had been beaten, and hundreds had been raped."

The FSIN press service in Irkutsk did not answer telephone calls from RFE/RL for comment on this story. Prison officials in Angarsk did not respond to written queries.

Written by RFE/RL senior correspondent Robert Coalson based on reporting by correspondent Sania Yusupova of Siberia.Realities of RFE/RL's Russian Service.
Richard Ratcliffe, husband of British-Iranian aid worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, and their daughter Gabriella protest outside the Iranian Embassy in London. (file photo)
Richard Ratcliffe, husband of British-Iranian aid worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, and their daughter Gabriella protest outside the Iranian Embassy in London. (file photo)

The husband of a British-Iranian woman says his wife is “traumatized” by the possibility that she could be sent back to prison in Iran after an Iranian appeals court upheld a ruling that adds another year to her sentence.

Richard Ratcliffe said concerns have been raised that his wife, Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, may now be sent back to prison, telling the BBC on October 16 that his wife is "waiting for the call to summon her back" and said that she was "traumatized at the thought of having to go back to jail."

Ratcliffe, who has been campaigning for his wife's return to Britain since her original incarceration in 2016, said he was surprised to learn of the ruling upholding the additional year to her sentence.

Lawyer Hojjat Kermani said on October 16 that Zaghari-Ratcliffe was "concerned" when he informed her about the appeals court decision at a closed-door hearing. He said that she had been in touch with her family about the decision.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe was first jailed in 2016 after being accused of plotting against the regime -- charges that she, her supporters, and rights groups deny.

She was sentenced to another year of confinement in April on charges of "spreading propaganda against the system” while participating in a protest in front of the Iranian Embassy in London in 2009.

She spent the final year of her initial sentence on parole at her parents' home in Tehran as Iran temporarily released thousands of inmates in response to the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.

The initial court ruling against Zaghari-Ratcliffe was five years plus a one-year travel ban abroad. The extra year added to her sentence means Zaghari-Ratcliffe cannot leave Iran to join her husband and 7-year-old daughter in London for nearly two more years.

Ratcliffe said he held a strategy meeting with the British Foreign Office on October 15 anticipating something would happen to his wife's appeal during the autumn.

He said he had urged the government to take quicker action to get his wife out and criticized it for failing to deal with problems until they become crises.

“This is Iran threatening a crisis. One hopes that the government takes it seriously," he said.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said in a statement on October 16 that Iran’s decision to proceed with the "baseless" charges against Zaghari-Ratcliffe was an "appalling continuation of the cruel ordeal she is going through."

She added: "We are doing all we can to help Nazanin get home to her young daughter and family and I will continue to press Iran on this point."

Employed by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of the Reuters news agency, Zaghari-Ratcliffe was taken into custody at Tehran's Imam Khomeini International Airport in April 2016 when she tried to return to Britain after visiting family in Iran.

Rights groups accuse Iran of holding dual nationals as bargaining chips for money or influence in negotiations with the West. Tehran denies the accusation.

With reporting by AP, AFP, dpa, and the BBC

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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