On 19 March 2022, Mariano García Calatayud, a 75-year-old Spaniard living in Ukraine, rang the buzzer to his own apartment in the city of Kherson to let his partner Tetyana Marina know that he had returned. By the time Marina had gone downstairs to let him in, however, García had disappeared without trace.
That day he had been returning home after attending a protest against the Russian occupation of the city. “We already knew that the Russians were kidnapping people who spoke out against the occupation,” Marina says. “I realised straight away that he had been detained.”
Neither she nor her family have seen García since. It took over a year for the Russian authorities just to confirm that García was being held in Simferopol, the capital of annexed Crimea. This was being done, they said, to “verify reports” that he had been involved in activities “aimed at undermining Russia’s security”.
Garcia is yet to be charged with a crime. His lawyer, Anatoly Fursov, believes this may be due to the Kremlin’s interest in his client’s potential use as a bargaining chip in any potential prisoner swap with the West.