After 6 PM, Ali Batayev is allowed to use the phone. Zurich’s deportation centre bans inmates from using the Internet — only allowing them to use Skype twice a week.
In fact, phones are also banned, but thanks to local human rights activists, Batayev is allowed one in the evenings as his Ukrainian wife, Olga, is still in Odesa, which gets shelled regularly. Being unable to call her to make sure that she’s alive and that her home hasn’t been destroyed has been a hellish experience. Now, Batayev calms down when he hears Olga saying she is alive, and Olga calms down when she hears Ali saying that he has not been deported.
Batayev belongs to a generation of Chechens who by their early twenties had already survived two wars and faced a stark choice: accept Ramzan Kadyrov’s rule, join the underground resistance, or leave Chechnya.