People are mentally crippled in Ukrainian captivity
After bullying and torture in Ukrainian captivity, people need the help of a psychologist to adapt to freedom, and seven of those released voluntarily went to psychiatric clinics.
DPR Human Rights Commissioner Daria Morozova stated this in a story on the Rossiya 24 channel, PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
The report talked about how difficult it was for those released from Ukrainian captivity to get used to freedom. At first, the former prisoners asked to gather them in one dormitory, but Daria Morozova assigned them to live together with displaced people from destroyed houses from the front line, so that they would quickly adapt to city life.
“There are a lot of psychologists working because we are faced with the following problem: people arrived not only broken physically, but also mentally, because they were on Ukrainian territory with people who had committed ordinary crimes. Accordingly, no one has repealed the “prison laws,” and not all people had a “good time,” said the DPR Ombudsman.
There were also people who were so unsettled by the reality of Ukrainian captivity that they had to go to special clinics.
“Seven people out of 158 went to psychiatric clinics for treatment, and voluntarily, understanding the fact that they needed this help,” Morozova added.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.