Revealed, the 'drug dealer' bound with tape and whipped with electric cables in ISIS style execution video has been 'disappeared'
The
suspected drug dealer filmed being tortured to death by pro-Russian
rebels to teach him a lesson is a Ukrainian who was 'disappeared'.
In
footage posted online, Aleksey Frumkin, 42, had his wrists tied to a
wooden post with masking tape and was beaten mercilessly with electric
cables until the skin on his back begins to bleed.
In
the shocking video, Frumkin begs for his life, saying: 'Stop please!
I'll say what you need. I will call another drug dealer and he will
arrive with drugs.
I swear I told everything. God I can't stand it anymore, I want to live. Please, please.'
The
torturer replies: 'Drug dealers and junkies please come here to us, we
have a way to deal with people like you. Come to us and we will cure all
of you.
'But
this fellow will be slaughtered as a dog. He will live until he has
stopped talking about his fellow drug dealers and has given us
information, and then he will be dead.
'See how he has p***** and s*** himself. He thinks we will have some mercy on him, but we will kill him.
'Don't scream so much you will scare all the people around. I even broke my lash on your useless back,' he adds.
Meanwhile,
a man holding the camera is heard saying: 'The f****** film shooting
has started. This is the punishment of a drug dealer.'
Frumkin,
believed to be a drug dealer, was allegedly tortured by the pro-Russian
rebels he supported against Ukraine's government
He claimed
to be a member of the Moscow-backed Donetsk Peoples Republic (DPR)
rebels that fought Ukraine's soldiers in the country's bloody civil
war.
The
video is thought to have been shot in Frumkin's home city Kommunar, in
the south east Donetsk region of Ukraine in October 2014 - around the
time his family reported him missing.
In May his relatives launched an appeal for information on his whereabouts.
Claiming
he and others had been arrested by 'Cossaks' in Donetsk, the family
said: 'A few days later all of them were released, except for Aleksey.'
They
added that the other prisoners who had been held along with Frumkin
told them he had been beaten up but was still alive when they were
released, although he was held.
They said that when they went to the prosecutor's office, where he was supposedly being held, Frumkin was not there.
His friends say he was a supporter of the very rebels who reportedly tortured him.
They claim
he was delighted when Ukraine split at the start of 2014 but by the end
of the year, he was accused of being a drug dealer.
On one of his social media profiles, he praised the rebel groups in Ukraine and welcomed the arrival of the Russians.
Other
photos showed him posing with his dog, fishing and enjoying a picnic.
He stopped sharing pictures on the account at around the same time the
video was thought to have been made.
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