Intimidation, propaganda and hunger | The Russian method in the annexed territories in Ukraine

(Zaporijjia) One came out of an evacuation bus with sobbing so hard in her throat she could barely utter a word; the other with tears in his eyes but with an expression of immense relief.

Posted at 7:34

Dmitry ZAKS
France Media Agency

Svitlana Tytova and Tetiana Verjykovska, both arrive from the Russian-occupied town of Berdyansk on the Black Sea coast.

For Svitlana Tytova, returning to Kyiv-controlled territory immediately brings painful memories to the surface.

“We fled because eight men armed with automatic rifles entered our house,” said the 52-year-old journalist, hugging her granddaughter tightly. “They were bringing people together.”

Difficult for her to say more.

A few meters further on, Tetyana Verjykovska savors this moment: “That’s freedom! “. “I think I can manage now,” wants to believe this 29-year-old choreographer.

The psychiatrist Tetiana Tchekoï, however, strongly doubts it.

“Each of these people suffers from post-traumatic stress,” explains the 45-year-old specialist who has helped thousands of displaced Ukrainians since the first fighting in 2014 with Moscow-backed separatists in the east of the country.

According to her, the Russian methods since the invasion of Ukraine launched at the end of February mix psychological intimidation and brainwashing.

“Psychologically scarred”

Foreign journalists have no possibility of gaining independent access to the occupied areas, and the few who can flee these areas do not take any material memories with them.

Mme Chekoï and his colleague, Ouliana Ilmane say they observe every day the traces of the psychological tactics used by the Russians in the annexed Ukrainian territories, lifting part of the veil on the living conditions in these areas.

The two women spend their days in a specialized center, near the only checkpoint where Ukrainians can cross the front line in the south.

Only a handful of people cross it each day, with the Kremlin allowing only young mothers and the elderly to leave the annexed areas at the end of September.

For these two psychiatrists, “the Russians see these people as their property” in the regions of Kherson and Zaporijjia. “They try to break them” mentally, “and that marks them psychologically”, believes Mme Ilmane.

Tank gun pointed at a school

Mme Chekoï claims to have heard that “the Russians ordered a woman to teach at school (after annexation, editor’s note) because she was liked by the students and that could bring them back to class “.

“And afterwards, they had a lesson with a tank that was pointing its cannon at the school,” she continues.

As a visible reminder that the version of history and warfare taught in school now had to follow official Kremlin doctrine.

According to Mme Chekoy, the school was even decorated with flags on which was written “On Berlin”, a rallying cry of the Soviet army during the Second World War, when Moscow justified its invasion in Ukraine by the need to “save”. the Russian-speaking population of a “genocide” carried out by “Nazis” in power.

“The Russians have blocked all (Ukrainian) TV channels and are now broadcasting their own,” she describes.

“My friends told me that people who have lived (in these conditions) for two or three weeks have already changed their way of thinking,” she says, lamenting that the Russian methods of indoctrination “work”.

Hungry and “lost”

According to the two psychiatrists, the chronic shortages of basic products and food also contribute to exhausting people in the face of Russian propaganda.

The Russians “have a well-defined action plan”, says Mme Chekoi. “At first, they destroy the person morally. Then they start to indoctrinate him,” she says, pointing to the important role of lack of food in a country already traumatized by famines in the 1930s and 1940s, during Soviet times.

Mme Ilman said he “saw children throwing themselves on food” when they arrived in territories controlled by Kyiv.

“Some can’t stop eating: they eat, go to the toilet, and come back to eat,” adds M.me Chekoy.

But it is above all the psychological after-effects that worry the two women.

“Many of those who come here are lost. We ask them questions and they don’t really understand what we are asking of them,” she explains.

Before adding, looking preoccupied: “Some cry and laugh at the same time. These are signs of hysteria, of stress”.


source site-59

Latest