Putin's Prisoner

Putin's Prisoner

by Aiden Aslin and John Sweeney
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 20/07/2023

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Aiden Aslin joined the Ukrainian marines in 2018, compelled to defend his adopted homeland from the growing threat of Russian invasion. In February 2022, as Russia mounted a full-scale offensive, Aiden and his unit were stationed at the frontline at Mariupol.


Pinned down at a Mariupol steelworks, after a month-long siege and running out of supplies, Aiden was part of the mass surrender of over a thousand Ukrainian troops, in April 2022. Then his real ordeal began.


Singled out for his British passport, Aiden was interrogated, tortured, stabbed, turned into a propaganda zombie, tried by a kangaroo court and then sentenced to death. A victim of a catalogue of abuses of international law, Aiden struggled to cling on to any hope of survival. Certain that he was going to be executed, he was eventually freed in a prisoner exchange and permitted to return home.


In Putin's Prisoner, Aiden will tell the full, harrowing story of his time fighting in Putin's war, of his six months in Russian captivity, and of his hardened resolve to defend the freedoms of the people of Ukraine.


©2023 Aiden Aslin & John Sweeney (P)2023 Penguin Audio

ISBN:
9781529916898
9781529916898
Category:
Military history
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
20-07-2023
Language:
English
Publisher:
Transworld
Aiden Aslin

Aiden Aslin is a British-born resident of Ukraine. Living in Mykolaiv with his fiancé, he joined the Ukrainian marines in 2018 and was called to the frontline ahead of the Russian invasion in February 2022.

He was one of over a thousand soldiers who surrendered after the month-long siege at the Mariupol steelworks, whereupon he was singled out for his British passport. His surrender, captivity, treatment and subsequent release received global media attention.

John Sweeney

John Sweeney is a British writer and broadcaster, and one of the most recognisable names in investigative journalism. As a reporter, first for the Observer, then the BBC Sweeney has covered wars and chaos in one hundred countries and been undercover to several regimes including Chechnya, North Korea and Zimbabwe. Over the course of his career Sweeney has won an Emmy, two Royal Television Society prizes, a Sony Gold award, the What The Papers Say Journalist of The Year Prize, an Amnesty International prize and the Paul Foot Award. He's written eight non-fiction books and four novels. He lives in London.

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