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ID: asHJIJn2/pol/509116194#509120190
6/30/2025, 2:15:20 PM
>>509120162
>The story of Vladyslav Rudenko, one of the Ukrainian teenagers abducted by Russia.
"For everything Russia did to my mother, to my family, and to me — I just took it down and left my underwear up there instead."
Russian soldiers punished him by placing him in solitary confinement for seven days — a tiny room with a small window. They gave him pills they claimed would "calm him down." Vladyslav flushed them down the toilet.
In the spring, Russian authorities transferred Vladyslav to a military academy. There, along with 800 other Ukrainian boys, he was trained to handle weapons, operate drones, and drive tanks. The officers tried to turn them into Russian soldiers.
Before Vladyslav could be sent to the battlefield, his mother began working with the Save Ukraine organization. They developed a rescue plan that involved gathering numerous documents required by Russian authorities to prove parental rights and traveling thousands of miles — from Ukraine’s eastern border to Poland, then north to Belarus, through Russia, and southwest to Lazurne in occupied part of Ukraine.
When Vladyslav’s mother arrived at the military camp, Russian officials interrogated her for three days, threatening her with 25 years in prison.
Russian officers demanded that mother and son record an interview in which they expressed support for the Russian occupation and claimed they were afraid to return to Ukraine — a fabricated lie used as a condition for their release.
Vladyslav and his mother returned home to Kherson in May 2023, seven months after the teenager’s abduction, and six months after Ukrainian forces liberated the city from Russian control.
>part 2
>The story of Vladyslav Rudenko, one of the Ukrainian teenagers abducted by Russia.
"For everything Russia did to my mother, to my family, and to me — I just took it down and left my underwear up there instead."
Russian soldiers punished him by placing him in solitary confinement for seven days — a tiny room with a small window. They gave him pills they claimed would "calm him down." Vladyslav flushed them down the toilet.
In the spring, Russian authorities transferred Vladyslav to a military academy. There, along with 800 other Ukrainian boys, he was trained to handle weapons, operate drones, and drive tanks. The officers tried to turn them into Russian soldiers.
Before Vladyslav could be sent to the battlefield, his mother began working with the Save Ukraine organization. They developed a rescue plan that involved gathering numerous documents required by Russian authorities to prove parental rights and traveling thousands of miles — from Ukraine’s eastern border to Poland, then north to Belarus, through Russia, and southwest to Lazurne in occupied part of Ukraine.
When Vladyslav’s mother arrived at the military camp, Russian officials interrogated her for three days, threatening her with 25 years in prison.
Russian officers demanded that mother and son record an interview in which they expressed support for the Russian occupation and claimed they were afraid to return to Ukraine — a fabricated lie used as a condition for their release.
Vladyslav and his mother returned home to Kherson in May 2023, seven months after the teenager’s abduction, and six months after Ukrainian forces liberated the city from Russian control.
>part 2
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