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‘I never worked for Russians’ – punished by Kyiv for being collaborator

BBC News

Published: August 22,2024 11:49 AM

“I don’t deserve to be here at all” is a protestation you would expect to hear from someone in prison. But, as she sits in her maroon overalls, Tetyana Potapenko is adamant that she is not who the Ukrainian state says she is.

One year into a five-year sentence, she is one of 62 convicted collaborators in this prison, held in isolation from other inmates.

The prison is near Dnipro, about 300km (186 miles) from Tetyana’s hometown of Lyman. Close to the front lines of the Donbas, Lyman was occupied for six months by Russia and liberated in 2022.

As we sit in the pink-walled room where inmates can phone home, Tetyana explains that she had been a neighborhood volunteer for 15 years, liaising with local officials – but that carrying on those duties once the Russians arrived had cost her dearly.

Ukrainian prosecutors claimed she had illegally taken an official role with the occupiers, which included handing out relief supplies.

“Winter was over, people were out of food, someone had to advocate,” she says. “I could not leave those old people. I grew up among them.”

The 54-year-old is one of almost 2,000 people convicted of collaborating with the Russians under legislation drafted nearly as quickly as Moscow’s advance in 2022.

Kyiv knew it had to deter people from both sympathizing and co-operating with the invaders.

And so, in a little over a week, MPs passed an amendment to the Criminal Code, making collaboration an offence – something they had failed to agree on since 2014, when Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.

Before the full-scale invasion, Tetyana used to liaise with local officials to provide her neighbors with materials such as firewood.

Once the new Russian rulers were in place, she says she was convinced by a friend to also engage with them to secure much-needed medicines.

“I didn’t co-operate with them voluntarily,” she says. “I explained disabled people couldn’t access the drugs they needed. Someone filmed me and posted it online, and Ukrainian prosecutors used it to claim I was working for them.”

After Lyman was liberated, a court was shown documents she had signed that suggested she had taken an official role with the occupying authority.

She suddenly becomes animated.

“What’s my crime? Fighting for my people?” she asks. “I never worked for the Russians. I survived and now find myself in prison.”

The 2022 collaboration law was drawn up to prevent people from helping the advancing Russian army, explains Onysiya Syniuk, a legal expert at the Zmina Human Rights Centre in Kyiv.

“However, the legislation encompasses all kinds of activities, including those which don’t harm national security,” she says.

Collaboration offences range from simply denying the illegality of Russia’s invasion, or supporting it in person or online, to playing a political or military role for the occupying powers.

Accompanying punishments are tough too, with jail terms of up to 15 years.

Out of almost 9,000 collaboration cases to date, Ms Syniuk and her team have analyzed most of the convictions, including Tetyana’s, and say they are concerned the legislation is too broad.

“Now people who are providing vital services in the occupied territories will also fall liable under this legislation,” says Ms Syniuk.

She thinks lawmakers should take into account the reality of living and working under occupation for more than two years.

We drive to Tetyana’s home town to visit her frail husband and disabled son. As we near Lyman, the scars of war are clear.

Civilian life drains away and vehicles gradually turn a military green. Droopy power lines hang from collapsed pylons and the main railway has been swallowed by overgrown grass.

While the sunflower fields are unscathed, the town isn’t. It has been bludgeoned by airstrikes and fighting.

The Russians have now moved back to within nearly 10km (6 miles). We were told they usually start shelling at about 15:30, and the day we visited was no exception.

Tetyana’s husband, Volodymyr Andreyev, 73, tells me he is “in a hole” – the household is falling apart without his wife, and he and his son only manage with the help of neighbors.

“If I were weak, I would burst into tears,” he says.

He struggles to understand why his wife is not with him.

Tetyana might have received a shorter sentence had she admitted her guilt, but she refuses. “I will never admit that I am an enemy of state,” she says.

But there have been enemies of state – and their actions have had deadly consequences.

Last autumn, we walked on the bloodstained soil of the liberated village Hroza in the Kharkiv region of eastern Ukraine. A Russian missile had hit a cafe where the funeral of a Ukrainian soldier was taking place – it had been impossible to hold the service while Hroza was under Russian occupation.

Fifty-nine people – almost a quarter of Hroza’s population – were killed. We knocked on doors to find children alone at home. Their parents weren’t coming back.

The security service later revealed that two local men, Volodymyr and Dmytro Mamon, had tipped off the Russians.

The brothers were former police officers who had allegedly begun working for the occupying force.

When the village was liberated, they fled across the border with Russian troops but stayed in touch with their old neighbors – who unwittingly told them about the upcoming funeral.

The brothers have since been charged with high treason – but are unlikely to be jailed in Ukraine.

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