Inside Russias Filtration Camps in Eastern Ukraine – The New Yorker
Content
This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.
On the morning of April 13th, forty-seven days after Russia began its siege of the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol, a man in his early twenties whom Ill call Taras heard his dog barking in the front yard. Two days earlier, Ukraines President, Volodymyr Zelensky, had pronounced Mariupol completely destroyed. Russian forces had bombed or otherwise damaged ninety per cent of the buildings, including dozens of schools and a maternity hospital. The mayor estimated that at least twenty-one thousand residents had been killed. Taras had spent the better part of the siege with his family in a small basement, without electricity or running water. He would surface intermittently to collect buckets of rain to drink or to prepare meals of wheat porridge over a wood fire. All the cell-phone towers were down. But Taras had learned through an acquaintance that a close friend in an adjacent neighborhood was still alive, and he invited his friend to come get drunk and cry a little. When Taras heard the dog barking, he assumed his friend had arrived and rushed out to greet him.
This piece was supported by the Pulitzer Center.
At the door were two men in military fatigues, cradling assault rifles. Taras could tell that they were Russians by the white bands wrapped above their knees and elbows, which the occupying army used to avoid friendly fire. There were also distinctions in their accents; the men applied a hard g where Ukrainians use an airy h in words like govori, or speak.
Who lives here? one of the soldiers asked.
Me and my family, Taras said.
The men walked past him and began to search the house, room by room. They took down Tarass full name. They noted the make and model of his car. One of the soldiers studied Tarass vehicle registration, and observed that it listed a different address. Taras tried to explain that before the siege he had had an apartment across town. Outside! the soldier shouted. You must go through inspection.
Taras had heard that in some neighborhoods men were disappearing. He asked the soldier nervously, How long will it take?
Two hours.
Taras felt a pang of hungerhe hadnt eaten anything since the previous day. He put on his sneakers, bluejeans, and a light jacket. The Russians escorted him to an intersection. He was not alone: six of his neighbors, all men of conscription age, had been rounded up, and were being guarded by a group of soldiers. Glancing down the block, Taras saw more Russians going from house to house, pulling young Ukrainian men into the street. Eventually, there were about forty men gathered with Taras.
A white bus pulled up, and Taras and his neighbors were instructed to board. After they filed in, and the doors closed, one of the Russians stood up and said, You dont know us and we dont know you. We trust you exactly as much as you trust us. He issued a single ground rule: If you act up, well wipe the floor with you. Does everyone understand?
As the bus pulled away, Taras stared out the window. The colossal Illich Iron and Steel Works plant, with its once billowing stacks, rolling conveyor belts, and raging blast furnaces, got smaller and smaller. The day before, Russia claimed that a thousand and twenty-six Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered in its shadow. Taras saw large apartment buildings that had been reduced to rubble, houses missing walls and ceilings. He saw crudely dug graves in yards and, lying under a bridge, three decomposing human bodies. Theres nothing left, he thought. The men in the bus gazed upon the ruins.
After a half hours drive northeast, the bus slowed to a stop in front of a run-down banquet hall, in a semi-urban settlement called Sartana, on the banks of the Kalmius River. The soldiers collected the mens I.D.s and herded them inside. There, a soldier would call out a captives name and bring him into an office, a kind of improvised interrogation room. When Tarass name was called, he walked into the office and found twelve soldiers sitting at several tables.
Have you served in the military? one of them asked.
I wish all this could be yours someday, son, but it belongs to a competitor.
Cartoon by Frank Cotham
No.
Why not?
I have a white ticket, Taras said, referring to a government pass denoting a medical condition that made him unfit for military service. Taras, who had boyish features and shaggy blond hair, had suffered from knee problems after tearing his meniscus playing soccer. The exemption was a disappointment; he had thought he would enlist in the Army, as his father had, and his father before him. Now he simply said, A sports injury.
Undress, another soldier demanded.
Taras stripped down to his underwear. From their seats, the men examined him for tattoos and any markings that might indicate that he had recently seen combatcalluses on the hands, chafing around the neck from a flak jacket, bruising on the shoulder from a firearms recoil.
Baiting him, one of the interrogators asked, Where do you plan to serve?
Nowhere.
At midday, the captives were brought outside. There was snow on the ground. The morning had been overcast andnow it began to rain, compounding the cold. Four more buses arrived, and Taras stood waiting as about a hundred and fifty more captives were processed. By the time he got back on the bus, his jacket and sneakers were soaked through. He was shivering.
The buses continued northeast, crossing into the self-proclaimed Donetsk Peoples Republic, a breakaway region whose independence Ukraine did not recognize. They stopped in the village of Kozatske, which had fallen to Russian-backed separatists years ago. There, in the cafeteria of an old primary school, each man was given a small serving of watery soup.
As night fell, the captives laid down tightly spaced rows of thin mats in classrooms and corridors. All the detainees appeared to be civilians from Tarass working-class neighborhood, men who had spent the preceding weeks preoccupied not with winning battles but with keeping their families alive, day to day, under conditions of extreme deprivation. Taras himself had already lost more than twenty pounds in less than two months under siege, a conspicuous drop from an already willowy frame. He had developed chronic pain in his chest, which he assumed was from breathing stale basement air or sleeping on concrete.
Taras dragged his mat into a hallway. His stomach growled, and his clothes were still damp from the rain. Hungry, cold, and exhausted, he curled up in a ball and fell into a restless sleep. He had not yet heard a term that would soon become familiar: filtration camp.
Filtration, broadly understood as a process by which a wartime government or a non-state actor identifies and sequesters individuals it deems a threat, does not, in itself, violate international humanitarian law. A recent report by researchers at Yale on Russias occupation of eastern Ukraine notes that occupying powers in international conflicts have the right to register persons within their area of control; the force in control may even detain civilians in certain limited circumstances. The system can comprise various checkpoints, registration facilities, holding centers, and detention camps. At a United Nations Security Council meeting earlier this month, Russias U.N. Ambassador, Vasily Nebenzya, went so far as to describe its filtration program as normal military procedure. Whether filtration amounts to normal procedure, or something worse, depends on how it is executedand to what end.
In 1994, Russia launched a full-scale military invasion to retake Chechnya, a separatist enclave that had declared independence three years earlier. The day after Russian tanks rolled in, Russias interior ministry issued Directive No. 247: to establish filtration points for the identification of persons who had been arrested in the zones of combat operations and their involvement in the combat activities. (In Russia, the term filtration point entered into circulation during the Second World War, when Soviet authorities began to screen for what Lavrentiy Beria, the head of Stalins secret police, called enemy elements in territory liberated from the Germans.) The first camp in Chechnyas capital, Grozny, opened on January 20, 1995. The following year, researchers for Human Rights Watch concluded that Russian forces were beating and torturing the Chechen men being held there. Many were subsequently used as human shields in combat and as hostages to be exchanged for Russian detainees.
Three years later, during the Second Chechen War, the Russian general Victor Kazantsev expanded filtration, imposing an identity verification regime in liberated areas and calling for the toughening of search procedures at checkpoints. Chechen civilians were arbitrarily detained in even greater numbers; they were often discharged without their identity documents, limiting their freedom of movement and exposing them to rearrest at checkpoints. An H.R.W. report outlined what had become a standard strategy: Russian forces would bombard Chechen communities, then conduct a mop-up whereby soldiers went house to house arresting men, and sometimes women, suspected of having ties to rebel forces.
The researchers described the filtration process in Chechnya as a form of collective punishment imposed not only on the disappeared but also on their families. One woman, referring to a male relative who had been taken away, told the researchers, Hes nowherenot among the living, not among the dead. The prominent human-rights group Memorial, which Russias Supreme Court shut down earlier this year, estimated that during Russias two wars in Chechnya at least seventy thousand civilians perished and more than two hundred thousand Chechens passed through filtration camps.
In early 2014, Russian forces invaded and annexed Crimea. Several months later, a Russian humanitarian convoy, ultimately comprising an estimated twelve thousand troops, entered the Donbas, in eastern Ukraine, in support of the D.P.R. and the so-called Luhansk Peoples Republic. The following winter, the Ukrainian parliament commissioned fifteen international and Ukrainian human-rights organizations to prepare a report on places of illegal detention in occupied parts of the Donbas. The report, published in 2015, identified seventy-nine facilities administered by Russian forces and Russian-affiliated armed groups. Based on extensive testimony, the authors found a widespread practice of torture and cruel treatment of illegally detained civilians and military personnel.
Read the original:
Inside Russias Filtration Camps in Eastern Ukraine - The New Yorker
- Russia rings in new year with mass drone strike on Ukraine, Putin says he's confident of victory - NBC News - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Look ahead to 2026: Prospects for peace in Ukraine - CBS News - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- A ceasefire in Ukraine would be fraught with danger for the whole of Europe - The Independent - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- The British military expected to see more of Russia's 'prestige equipment,' like T-14 tanks, fighting in Ukraine, officer says - Business Insider - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Why Security Guarantees Are So Crucial, and Thorny, for Ukraine - The New York Times - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Brooks and Capehart on chances of Ukraine-Russia talks leading to peace in 2026 - PBS - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Trump says he's 'not thrilled' with Putin over war in Ukraine - Reuters - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Why a Nuclear Plant Is a Big Sticking Point in the Ukraine Peace Plan - The New York Times - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Over 400,000 Russians killed, wounded for 0.8 percent of Ukraine in 2025 - Al Jazeera - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- New year, new deal? Why peace still feels elusive for Ukraine - The Guardian - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- OPINION: Ukraine: The Case For Optimism (Part I) - Kyiv Post - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Starmer expects major progress toward Ukraine peace in 2026 | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine war briefing: Russia makes biggest battleground gains since first year of war, analysis shows - The Guardian - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Drone strikes kills 2 in Russian border regions ahead of Ukraine peace talks - AP News - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Russia accuses Ukraine of killing 27 people in New Year attack in occupied Kherson region - BBC - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- The Separation: Inside the Unraveling U.S.-Ukraine Partnership - The New York Times - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Trump not thrilled with Putin, says too many people dying in Ukraine war - South China Morning Post - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Russia reports drone interceptions near capital as Ukraine sanctions target Moscows war industry - TRT World - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Poland reiterates it will not deploy its troops to Ukraine - Ukrinform - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- How Russia and Ukraine Are Fighting to Shape Trumps View of the War - The New York Times - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine Reacts to US Action in Venezuela, Calls for Democracy and Rule of Law - UNITED24 Media - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Russia's losses in Ukraine rise faster than ever as US pushes for peace deal - BBC - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine-Russia war latest: Moscow and Kyiv exchange drone strikes on energy grids in New Year attacks - The Independent - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraines Ambassador was absolutely right to respond to Speaker Okamuras infuriating insults toward Ukraine and its leadershipand he did so... - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine Trains Around 100 New Pilots in 2025 to Boost Military Workforce - Aviation A2Z - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- US offers Ukraine a 15-year security guarantee as part of peace plan, Zelenskyy says - AP News - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine imposes new sanctions targeting Russian military-industrial sector - AzerNews - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Russia's war casualty toll in Ukraine up by 900 over past day - Ukrinform - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Russia Threatens to Toughen Its Stance on Ending the War in Ukraine - The New York Times - January 4th, 2026 [January 4th, 2026]
- Ukraine's own 'Dancing with the Stars' is back on for a special episode with wartime heroes - NBC News - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- U.S. and Ukraine reach consensus on key issues aimed at ending the war - NPR - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Most Russians expect the war with Ukraine to end in 2026, as its economy slows - Business Insider - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Zelensky Open to Pulling Back Troops in Eastern Ukraine to Reach Peace Deal With Russia - The New York Times - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Russia-Ukraine updates: Unclear if Moscow will reply soon to peace plan - Al Jazeera - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine steps up attacks on Russian air bases to counter strikes on cities and infrastructure - CNN - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Border villagers abducted and taken to Russia, says Ukraine - BBC - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Heres What Is in the 20-Point Peace Plan for Ukraine - The New York Times - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine Withdraws From Eastern Town, Complicating Negotiating Stance - The New York Times - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine war latest: Police officers killed in another deadly Moscow car bomb blast - The Independent - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Russia says analyzing draft of US-backed peace plan on Ukraine - Anadolu Ajans - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Zelensky unveils new US-backed, 20-point plan to end the war in Ukraine - France 24 - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Zelenskyy floats terms for peace plan, signaling possible withdrawal from eastern Ukraine - politico.eu - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine and US agree updated 20-point peace plan after Moscow hit by another deadly bombing - Sky News - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Russia hits Ukraine with 'massive' attack, says Zelensky, after he warned of Christmas strikes - BBC - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Putin has been briefed on U.S. proposals for Ukraine peace plan, the Kremlin says - Reuters - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine marks 30 years in Council of Europe with Empowered exhibition in Strasbourg - The Ukrainian Weekly - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- US and Ukraine reach consensus on key issues to end war with Russia but territorial disputes remain - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Zelenskyy says he's open to free economic zone in Ukraine's east but move must be voted on | CBC News - CBC - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Opinion | How the West is losing Ukraine without losing a battle - The Washington Post - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- Ukraine war in 2025: Peace talks, missile strikes and winter blackouts - AnewZ - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- With Attacks on Oil Tankers, Ukraine Takes Aim at Russias War Financing - The New York Times - December 25th, 2025 [December 25th, 2025]
- A crisis over using frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine - The Economist - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- 2 killed as Russian overnight attack hits infrastructure in Ukraine, officials say - ABC News - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Zelenskys Government Sabotaged Oversight, Allowing Corruption in Ukraine to Fester - The New York Times - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Ukraine war live: Kremlin welcomes US security vision ahead of London peace talks - The Independent - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Nicola Jennings on Putins dealings with Trump over Ukraine cartoon - The Guardian - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Russia bombards Ukraine as US says progress made in talks with Kyiv - BBC - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Russia rapidly gaining territory in Ukraine ahead of Downing Street summit - The Telegraph - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Putin says Russia will take Donbas by force or Ukraine's troops will withdraw - BBC - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Russia unleashes massive drone and missile attack on Ukraine as talks to end war continue - PBS - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Alarm grows in Europe over what is seen as Trumps betrayal of Ukraine - Los Angeles Times - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Only Europe can save Ukraine from Putin and Trump but will it? - The Guardian - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Ukraine's peace talks with US constructive but not easy: Zelenskyy - TRT World - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Ukraine, Europe and the new economics of war - Financial Times - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Ukraine showed the UK its classic 'tactically safe' trench-clearing methods don't work in chaotic, booby-trapped trenches - Business Insider - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- Looking for the 10 best Ukraine-related books of 2025? Weve got you - The Kyiv Independent - December 7th, 2025 [December 7th, 2025]
- U.S. and Ukraine hold marathon talks in Miami on Trump's peace plan - Axios - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin risks fresh row with Trump after pledging to supply uninterrupted fuel to India - The Independent - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- No mistrust between Europe and US over Ukraine, Macron says - The Guardian - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Putin says there are points he can't agree to in the U.S. proposal to end Ukraine war - NPR - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- France's Macron: unity between Europe and U.S on Ukraine is "essential" - Reuters - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- This Week in the Russia-Ukraine War (December 5) - Defense Security Monitor - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Putin says Russia will take all of Ukraine's Donbas region militarily or otherwise - Reuters - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Enough dithering. Europe must pay to save Ukraine - The Economist - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- What are the Results of U.S. talks in Russia to end the war in Ukraine? - NPR - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Putin says there are points he can't agree to in the US proposal to end Russia's war in Ukraine - AP News - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Stakes High, Europe Races to Save Its Financing Plan for Ukraine - The New York Times - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Ukraine war briefing: Stop wasting the worlds time, Putin told - The Guardian - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Ukraine war latest: HUR says it destroyed Russian Su-24 tactical bomber, other targets in occupied Crimea - The Kyiv Independent - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]
- Giving up territory would be 'unjust peace', says Ukraine's armed forces chief - Sky News - December 5th, 2025 [December 5th, 2025]