Alexander Shestun, especially for the Cheka-OGPU, on March 9, I was placed in a punishment cell for 13 days…

Alexander Shestun especially for the Cheka-OGPU

On March 9, I was placed in a punishment cell for 13 days due to lawlessness. He was urgently discharged from the hospital two days after the stitches were removed. Two abdominal surgeries are usually accompanied by bed rest for a month at home and a ban on heavy lifting for six months. To be locked in a punishment cell immediately after a hasty discharge is overkill. They issued three idiotic reports: 1) Went to the toilet at 6:02 am without a prison uniform jacket. We get up at 6:00 and everyone goes to the washbasin in thermal underwear until the end of exercise at 6:30. 2) On the same day I left the toilet at 6:10. 3) Sat down on the bed at about the same time for 3 minutes.

Absolutely everyone is allowed to straighten out their bed in the evening half an hour before bedtime. After getting up, you can wash your face for half an hour, do exercises and cover your bunk.

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– You could break it down into seconds and write out 100 reports! – I was indignant. – Show me the photo, I didn’t sit on the bed!

– We won’t show it! – the owner cut off.
To be honest, I did not expect such meanness from the head of IK-6, Pavel Motin. Previously, he twice vowed to stop repression and “start living with a clean slate.” Two years ago, this same Motin put me on the books “as prone to escape” on the basis of false reports and denunciations.

The Tver Regional Court declared his actions illegal and removed the red stripe, but for about a year I was not allowed to sleep at night. As a result of the hunger strike for this reason, I developed hernias that had to be operated on.

One of the informers for the escape, Nikita Kolesov, recruited into the Wagner PMC, died in Ukraine and was buried on the Alley of Heroes. Another convicted murderer, Fedorov, nicknamed “Releny,” returned home with awards.

Now former prisoners of IK-6, released after participating in hostilities in Ukraine, often go on short dates in cafes with their friends. Sparkling orders and medals barely fit on the chest. The administration organizes such out-of-turn meetings to promote further recruitment.

To be honest, I regretted a hundred times my requests to Motin for a long meeting. In five years, I was only able to hug my children and wife once (a year ago). All FSIN documents talk about encouraging social connections with family, but in reality this is just a pretext for blackmail.

Motin gave a demonstrative flogging for my anti-war position because of a publication about corruption in the Federal Penitentiary Service. He has found a pain point and considers it normal to feel pressured by separation from loved ones. He knows that documents have arrived for me from the Russian Investigative Committee on a new criminal case, and the prospect of being sent to a Moscow pre-trial detention center, which means I will again be deprived of a long-awaited meeting.

To be continued

“ВЧК ОГПУ”