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Ukraine crisis: Interview with Irma Krat - the journalist and activist being held in Slovyansk: 'I came over here to give voice to people who have not been heard'

Irma Krat was taken captive on Sunday for her suspected involvement in the mistreatment of riot policemen and a Russian journalist

Kim Sengupta
Tuesday 22 April 2014 13:04 BST
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She was led in wearing rather unlikely prison clothing: a pale fashionable coat and vivid red shoes, a tiny figure with a burly man in a balaclava holding each arm. One of them unwrapped the black and white check scarf around her face, leaving Irma Krat blinking in the sunlight, looking momentarily lost.

But the young woman whose detention by the separatists in eastern Ukraine has turned into a cause célèbre tried hard to gain composure, protesting her innocence of the accusations against her. They ranged from taking part in the torture of a journalist, to belonging to an extremist right-wing group, to having an outdated press card.

Ms Krat is one of many. The pro-Moscow groups who have taken over state institutions in a swathe of cities and towns in the region have been responsible for holding a growing number of detainees. Vyacheslav Ponomaryov, the newly-installed mayor of Slovyansk, had no hesitation confirming this at the weekend, stating: “We have captured some spies, infiltrators. Right now, we’re working them over: they are being held in captivity.”

A few of the captives have been released after pressure from human rights groups. Friends of Ms Kart are approaching international organizations for help. One of them, Oleg Veremeenko, a lawyer in Kiev, said: “She was crazy to go there [to the east]. But I couldn’t talk her out of it”. He is among a group now knocking on doors to get her released.

But Ms Krat is regarded as a valuable asset by her captors, not least in the propaganda war. The 29-year-old woman is a journalist and an activist; not just an activist but one of the few women to serve with militia groups in the Maidan, the centre of protest in Kiev which overthrew the government of Viktor Yanukovych. In particular, it has been claimed, she was linked to the Patriots of Ukraine, ultra-nationalists regarded as bedfellows of the Right Sector, regularly attacked as Nazis in this area.

Ms Krat arrived in the east from Kiev at the start of the Easter weekend, posting Facebook messages from the city of Kramatorsk where Ukrainian troops, sent on an anti-terrorist mission to retake government buildings seized by protestors, have taken refuge at the airport after having their own armoured personnel carriers seized.

On Sunday, she arrived at next-door Slovyansk; it was a bad place to be at a wrong time. The city has become a formidable bastion for the militant movement, its police station occupied by some of the best trained and best armed fighters among the secessionists; many of them former soldiers and police officers. Furthermore, just hours earlier, there had been an attack on a checkpoint, with Right Sector blamed for three killings.

Tension was high in the aftermath, with snarling militiamen accusing foreign journalists of being spies. Ms Kart was recognized and swiftly arrested. Her Facebook page shows her with men with armbands which looked like the Wolfsangel, an emblem favoured by the extreme right. In any event she had been vocal and prominent as a leader of the Womens’ 100 organisation which guarded protests camps in the Maidan.

On Monday, The Independent was among a small group of journalists taken inside the separatist barracks to interview Ms Krat. A man in a balaclava who described himself as an officer in the People’s Guard declared that she had been among those who had mistreated Sergiy Rulyov, who was kidnapped and allegedly had his fingernails pulled out for “revealing” that the riot police unit, Berkut, did not initiate the shooting in which more than 80 people were killed during the uprising.

“No, I only knew these people, I did not have anything to do with torture. Of course, I agree that there should be an investigation into what happened, I am against such things, I am an activist” she protested. “I came over here to give voice to people who have not been heard, I would not abuse people. I want to say sorry, but they shouldn’t put all the evil on me.”

Mr Rulyov, who was seen as a collaborator by the protest movement, claimed that he was punched, and kicked before needles were inserted under his fingernails in the attack on 5 March. “One of them was a woman in a headscarf, she did not say anything, but repeatedly kicked me in the groin,” he said in an interview: Ms Krat was subsequently named on his Facebook page as the assailant.

On Sunday evening Ms Kart was interviewed, with a bag over her face, by Life News, a Russian website which has close ties with the country’s security establishment. In footage distasteful to watch, the reporter parroted the statement of the separatists: “The peoples’ militia has stopped a provocation by the head of the Maidan cell before being harangued about what she was doing here.”

On Monday, the same young female reporter took upon herself to act as the spokeswoman for the separatists, telling journalists not to block the entrance to their sandbagged base. Ms Krat was repeatedly asked whether she regretted being on the Maidan. Her response was: “We did not know then what we know now. There is no point in talking about that now, we should think about the future. I think we should think of the future.”

What about the prospect of her being exchanged for prisoners being held by the Kiev administration? “I am not a dog to be traded. I will get out of here by my own efforts; I have done nothing wrong”, was the defiant reply.

Three other journalists, two Italians and one from Bylorussia were arrested, but later released in Slovyansk on Monday. But the mayor, Mr Ponomaryov, had a warning for the media: “Those who don’t report things truthfully will be thrown out of the city. We are watching you.”

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