In the town of
Balakliya, which the Russians occupied for six months, forensics specialists, human rights activists, criminal law experts, and Ukrainian investigators found extensive evidence of
war crimes and torture. During the
Russian occupation, the
Russian troops used a two-story building named "BalDruk" (after a former publishing company which had an office there before the war) as a prison and a torture center. The Russians also used the police station building across the street for torture. Around 40 people were held in torture chambers during the occupation and subjected to various forms of violence, including electrocution, beatings, and mutilation. One of those arrested (because he had a picture of his brother in a Ukrainian army uniform in his home) and tortured reported hearing screams through the walls. At least several Ukrainian prisoners died as a result of the torture. Aleksander Kulik, head of the information department of the
Derhachi city council, stated that several young women were subjected to
gang rapes that lasted for several days. Another Russian torture chamber was found in the liberated village of
Kozacha Lopan, located at the local railway station. In
Izyum, which the Russian army occupied on 1 April 2022, and which Ukrainian forces liberated in September 2022, journalists for the
Associated Press found ten torture sites. An investigation found that both Ukrainian civilians and POWs were "routinely" subject to torture. At least eight men died while under torture.
Rape as torture in Izyum A 52-year-old woman was taken by Russian soldiers in occupied Izyum and repeatedly raped while her husband was beaten. She was arrested on 1 July along with her husband, bags were placed over their heads, and they were taken to a small shed which served as a torture room in Izyum. Russian interrogators told her they would "beat the 'Ukrainian' out of (her)" == Torture chambers in other areas ==