Shaun Pinner, a British former soldier released from Russian captivity after a prisoner exchange, issued a stark warning about the treatment of Australian Oscar Jenkins, who is currently held by Russian forces. Pinner recounted his own experiences, including torture and coercive interrogation techniques used to elicit false confessions.
Pinner described his captivity, detailing inhumane conditions, including solitary confinement, torture involving electric shocks, and inadequate food. His account aligns with a UN Human Rights Office report documenting systematic abuse of Ukrainian POWs, including torture, sexual violence, and executions.
Despite the harsh conditions, Pinner emphasized that Western soldiers are valuable bargaining chips, leading to a shift in treatment rather than improvement.
Pinner's release was part of a prisoner exchange brokered by Saudi Arabia and Roman Abramovich, exchanging 10 foreign fighters for 215 pro-Russian captives. However, Pinner continues to experience chronic pain from his injuries. He filed a lawsuit in Kyiv and won financial compensation for the torture he endured.
The article discusses the complex roles of foreign fighters in the Ukrainian conflict, highlighting the risks they face if captured. A Royal United Services Institute report notes that while some bring valuable expertise, others pose operational challenges due to lack of discipline or readiness.
Pinner stresses the need for continued international support for Ukraine, highlighting that the treatment he and Jenkins experienced could befall anyone defending what they believe is right. Jenkins' survival depends on both international pressure and his own resilience.
Recent videos released pro-Russian Telegram channels show Jenkins in captivity, stating he has a broken arm and feels weak, while another features a medical examination where Russian captors joke about his blood pressure readings to confirm he is “not dead”.
Pinner warned Jenkins’s loved ones to prepare for coerced confessions, especially humiliating ones circulated on social media.
“It won’t be a surprise if videos surface of Jenkins confessing to things he didn’t do,” Pinner says. “They’ll make him say he fought here, went there, committed unspeakable acts. You often say things that aren’t true just to make it end.”
Pinner’s ordeal began as soon as he was taken into Russian custody.
“They’ll hold you in a cell barely big enough to lie down. Sometimes the food’s awful; sometimes there’s nothing,” he says. “At first, I thought I’d been taken to an office building. It was dark, cold, with tiled walls. They strapped me to a chair and electrocuted me multiple times. The pain was so bad I couldn’t feel my legs afterward.”
His account matches a recent UN Human Rights Office report detailing systematic abuse of prisoners of war. Since August 2024, there has been a surge in credible reports of Ukrainian POW executions, at least 62 victims across 19 incidents. The UN has independently verified 15 of those deaths using video, photo evidence, and eyewitness accounts.
The same report documents widespread torture of Ukrainian captives. Of 42 recently released POWs, all reported enduring torture, including beatings, electric shocks, and solitary confinement. Sexual violence was also reported against both men and women.
“But the Russians aren’t stupid,” Pinner adds. “A Western soldier is a valuable negotiating tool. That doesn’t mean life gets easier, just different.”
What kept Pinner going, he says, was the voice of his Ukrainian wife, Larysa, echoing in his mind: “Live, fight, survive.” That phrase became a mantra – and later, the title of his book.
Pinner and fellow Briton Aiden Aslin were freed in a high-profile prisoner swap brokered by Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and former Chelsea FC owner Roman Abramovich, who greeted them after their release. The deal exchanged 10 foreign fighters for 215 pro-Russian captives.
But the ordeal didn’t end with freedom. Pinner still lives with chronic pain from injuries inflicted during beatings and stress positions.
Determined to hold his captors accountable, he filed a lawsuit in Kyiv in 2023. In a landmark ruling earlier this year, the court awarded him financial compensation for torture suffered in Russian captivity.
“Russia needs to be held accountable. When it comes back into the real world, it’s going to have to settle these legal cases. It’s not about now, but the future, next year, 10 years, 20 years time,” he says.
But foreign fighters have played a complex role in Ukraine’s defence since the Russian invasion, with many joining the International Legion or integrating into Ukrainian brigades. Pinner himself was there well before, joining the Ukrainian military in 2018 as a sniper instructor as the country rebuilt its armed forces following the annexation of Crimea. Previously, he’d spent nine years in the British Army’s Royal Anglian Regiment.
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A recent report by the Royal United Services Institute noted that while some foreign fighters bring valuable military expertise, others lack discipline or combat readiness, creating operational challenges on the battlefield. Others are misfits and ideologues.
“Only a small percentage of them are any use,” he says. “Runaways, believers and killers. Normally, you can fit them in one of those brackets ... You really only want the killers.”
The report also warned that foreign volunteers face heightened legal and personal risks if captured, as Russia routinely labels them mercenaries, a classification used to deny them protections under the Geneva Conventions.
Pinner says it’s more important than ever that Ukraine has the world’s support.
“Because what happened to me, what might be happening to Jenkins – it could happen to anyone who stands up for what’s right,” he says.
As Jenkins faces the bleak prospect of long-term imprisonment in Russia, his survival may depend not only on international pressure, but on his own will to endure.
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