Russia: Authorities must immediately disclose Nikita Zhuravel's whereabout
Reacting to the news that the family and lawyer of Nikita Zhuravel, who was sentenced in 2024 to 14 years' imprisonment for "high treason", "insulting religious feelings" and "hooliganism committed with religious hatred," have raised concerns about his disappearance while being transferred to a penal colony, Marie Struthers, Amnesty International's Eastern Europe and Central Asia Director, said:
"Russian authorities must urgently disclose the fate and whereabouts of Nikita Zhuravel and ensure his immediate contact with his lawyer and family. A person vanishing within the state penitentiary system for months amounts to enforced disappearance.
"Nikita Zhuravel already experienced petrifying levels of lawlessness at the hands of the authorities, when he was detained and arbitrarily transferred to Chechnya after allegedly burning the Quran. Once there, he was brutally physically assaulted on video by the son of regional leader Ramzan Kadyrov. This assault was widely reported yet manifestly ignored by the federal investigation authorities.
"?dding to this horror and injustice, Nikita Zhuravel's initial sentence of three-and-a-half years was significantly extended after he was found guilty of 'treason' for alleged cooperation with the secret services of Ukraine. Against this backdrop, his enforced disappearance means that his life and health may be at risk."
Background
Nikita Zhuravel's family last heard from the 22-year-old on 24 December 2025, when they got a letter while he was transferred from Moscow to a penal colony in Ulyanovsk, Central Russia.
Originally from Sevastopol in Russia-occupied Crimea, Zhuravel was detained on 20 May 2023 in Volgograd where he was living with his family. His arrest came a day after a video showing the burning a Quran in front of a mosque in Volgograd appeared online. He reportedly admitted guilt, stating that he had acted on instructions from an individual he believed to be a representative of Ukraine's security services, in exchange for 10,000 rubles (approximately US$ 130).
In apparent violation of jurisdictional rules, he was transferred for trial to the Chechen Republic, where he was beaten in detention by Adam Kadyrov, the then 15-year-old son of Ramzan Kadyrov. Footage of the assault was later published online by Ramzan Kadyrov himself, who praised his son's actions.
On 27 February 2024, the Visaitovsky District Court of Grozny found Nikita Zhuravel guilty of "insulting the feelings of believers" (Article 148(2) of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation) and "hooliganism committed on the grounds of religious hatred" (Article 213(2)) and sentenced him to 3.5 years of imprisonment in a penal colony. On 25 November 2024, the Volgograd Oblast Court increased his prison term to 14 years after finding him guilty of "high treason" (Article 275) for allegedly having "proactively offered cooperation to a representative of the Ukrainian Security Service" by sharing video footage of military transport.
ENDS
See also:
Public Document
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For more information please call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566 or +44 (0)77 7847 2126
email: press@amnesty.org
twitter: @amnestypress
International Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW, UK
Published in
M2 PressWIRE
on Friday, 27 March 2026
Copyright (C) 2026, M2 Communications Ltd.
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