Iryna Dovhan

Iryna Dovhan (Ukrainian: Ірина Володимирівна Довгань; born 25 January 1962[1]) and a native of Yasynuvata (a Donetsk suburb), who was abducted in 2014 by pro-Russian insurgents of the Vostok Battalion. She says that she was beaten and humilliated for five days. According to her testimony, she was held in jail and interrogated before being handed over to mercenaries, apparently from North Ossetia, who subjected her to torture, calling her a fascist and forcing her to shout "Sieg Heil", repeatedly shooting pistols next to her ears and threatening to rape her. She was freed on August 28 after, Mark Franchetti, a reporter for the British newspaper The Sunday Times, and Dmitry Beliakov, a Russian freelance photographer, pleaded with leader Alexander Khodakovsky to release her. Khodakovsky ordered Iryna Dovhan freed and vowed to discipline those responsible for her detention and public humiliation. She has since left Donetsk and joined her family in Mariupol, a city controlled by Ukrainian forces.

August 2014 incident

She became famous after photos of her made by Maurício Lima (published in New York Times) appeared in social and international media, showing her standing at a busy intersection in downtown Donetsk holding a sign identifying her as a spy and reading: "She kills our children". She says passers-by slapped and kicked her, spit on her and hurled tomatoes at her face. A photograph of her mistreatment stirred widespread outrage in Ukraine, prompted a social media effort to identify her and drew the attention of United Nations human rights monitors.[2][3][4][5]

The insurgents who abducted her are associated with the Vostok Battalion, led by former SBU operative Alexander Khodakovsky, accused her for being a spy and an artillery observer for the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Iryna Dovhan insists that never was a spy, but she freely admits to being a volunteer who collected donations (food, clothes, medications, and money) from locals and delivered them to Ukrainian soldiers stationed nearby. She also says she wasn't the only person in Donetsk who wanted to help Ukrainian soldiers, through these donations. She says she made a fateful mistake when she took photos of soldiers receiving the collections, with the intention of showing them to people who donated the supplies.[2][3][4][5]

In her interviews to Hromadske.tv and Radio Liberty, she confessed that if it would be for those pictures, she might not have ever see her family again. Later, Ukrainian television program "Vikna" filmed an exclusive interview of her and her family who all now live at hers friend.[6] She met, thanked and hugged the photographer Maurício Lima, whose photograph drew wide attention to her plight.[5]

Aftermath

Since September 2014 Dovhan and her family are rebuilding their lives in Mariupol, but they were not expecting any financial assistance from the Ukrainian government.[2][3][4][5]

In the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Dovhan as a non-partisan candidate tried to win a parliament seat by winning a single-member districts in Slovyansk; but failed to do so after finishing 7th with 4.16% of the votes.[7][1]

Personal life

Iryna Dovhan is a professional beautician, a native of Yasynuvata and, until recently, a resident of the town. She studied economics and owned a beauty salon in her hometown, which was taken by rebels in April. She is married and has a 16-year-old daughter and a 32-year-old son.[2][5]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.