Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Ukrainian soldier electrocuted through his genitals during horrific abuse by notorious ‘Dr Evil’ Russian torturer ‘loses the ability to speak or show emotion’

A traumatised Ukrainian PoW has reportedly been left unable to speak or show emotion after he was electrocuted while being held in a hellhole gulag in Russia.

Yuri Hulchuk, 23, was electrocuted through his genitals by a notorious Russian torturer named Dr Evil after being captured in the war in 2022.

He faced regular beatings by guards, with stun guns used on his legs so often he became almost paralysed.

Even after his release from the gulag, he is so traumatised he barely responded to his mother, doctor Milana Kompaniiets, when he finally reunited with her after more than two years in Russian hands.

Footage shows the pair hugging, with Hulchuk’s mother telling him: ‘We love you, we really love you. Without you, we didn’t have a life. You are our sun, our joy, our pride, our love.’ But Hulchuk tragically didn’t respond due to the torture he suffered.

This is the moment a traumatised Ukrainian PoW left unable to speak after he was electrocuted is reunited with his mother after two years in a hellhole gulag in Russia

Yuri Hulchuk, 23, was electrocuted through his genitals by a notorious Russian torturer named Dr Evil after being captured in the war

A tortured marine Yuri Hulchuk, 23, returned to Ukraine after over two years in captivity in Russia where he reprotedly lost the ability to speak and show emotion

Even after his release from the gulag, he is so traumatised he barely responded to his mother, doctor Milana Kompaniiets (pictured), when he finally reunited with her after more than two years in Russian hands

Footage shows the pair hugging, with Hulchuk's mother telling him: 'We love you, we really love you. Without you, we didn't have a life. You are our sun, our joy, our pride, our love'

Kompaniiets had spent two years searching for evidence her linguist son was alive after he vanished in the April 2022 fall of the Illich steel plant in Mariupol.

Eventually, she found a photograph of PoWs in Russia where she recognised his changed face.

Then she found from exchanged prisoners that he was alive, but also heard about how he had been horrifically tortured.

She personally met those freed in exchanges by Russia and eventually found a Ukrainian national guardsman who had shared a cell with her son in a harsh penal colony in Moldavia.

‘We talked every day for hours. I learned things that I, as a mother, shouldn’t have known,’ she said.

Her son was beaten relentlessly until he could no longer speak, according to the Media Initiative for Human Rights in Ukraine.

‘I think [he suffered] a stroke from the beating,’ she said. ‘My son spoke English, Chinese, and Polish fluently and was very talkative, and after all that, not being able to speak…’

Kompaniiets rested her head on her hands. ‘They used electric shocks on his genitals, and his legs were paralysed. When I found out, all I could do was cry and scream.’

She said: ‘I never understood why Ronald Reagan called the Soviet Union the ‘evil empire. Now we all understand. 

BEFORE AND AFTER: Pictures show Hulchuk before he was captured by Russian forces, left, and right, after two years in captivity

Kompaniiets (right) had spent two years searching for evidence her linguist son was alive after he vanished in the April 2022 fall of the Illich steel plant in Mariupol

Her son (right) had insisted on leaving university and joining the 36th Marine Brigade against her wishes, she said

‘In Russia, they are extracting the animal from people. They want to eliminate all of humanity.’

Her son had insisted on leaving university and joining the 36th Marine Brigade against her wishes, she said.

When she saw his picture he was ‘a complete stranger to me’ after the horrors he had faced.

His cellmate confirmed her son had been picked out for brutal torture.

‘The boys tried to talk to him, but he could not say a word,’ she said.

‘I don’t know if his speech centre is impaired or something [is wrong] with the muscles of his mouth or throat.’

He was eventually exchanged on September 14, ‘but due to the beatings, he lost the use of his legs, and he also lost his speech and emotions,’ said a report. 

‘Yury does not respond to his mother.’

Yet when he was first released, while he could not speak, he managed to type on a smart phone during a call to his mother, saying: ‘Mama is as beautiful as always.’

He said his father was ‘as grey haired as before’.

Before the war, he spoke three foreign languages fluently and was studying to be a Chinese translator.

This post was originally published on this site

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