The late Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny spent much of his prison sentence in SHIZO, also known as a punishment cell. Two other high-profile Russian opposition politicians, Ilya Yashin and Vladimir Kara-Murza, have recently been sent to a different type of cell — PKT, literally translated as “cell-type confinement”, a high-security cell where prisoners can be sent for up to six months due to its marginally more comfortable conditions, as opposed to SHIZO’s formal limit of 15 days.
Both punishment cells and high-security cells are often equated with the English term solitary confinement, but they aren’t always solitary — some prisoners are forced to share a 7-square-metre room with multiple prisoners at once, while some endure days with almost no contact with the outside world.
Novaya Europe spoke to Soviet dissident and Russian human rights activist and journalist Alexander Podrabinek, who spent more than eight years in prison camps after being found guilty of slandering the Soviet system, writing for foreign media outlets and distributing samizdat, to gain an impression of what the cells are like, what prisoners can and cannot do in them and why the authorities are using them to exert pressure on political prisoners.