The Artsuyev case has demonstrated the risks of returning to Russia from "unfriendly countries."
Despite the publicity surrounding Shamil Artsuyev, relatives of Chechen native Shamil Artsuyev have not yet been able to determine his whereabouts. Artsuyev was removed from a government facility by security forces and has been without legal status for nearly four months, they noted.
"Caucasian Knot" reported that the family of 48-year-old Shamil Artsuyev has been trying to determine his fate for over three months since his detention on the Russian-Georgian border in November 2025. Several people have met Artsuyev in various detention centers, but security forces refuse to provide his family with any information about him.
Since 2017, Artsuyev lived in Vinnytsia, Ukraine, where he helped his younger brother, Zelimkhan, run a business—he opened a small factory producing lamps and headlights. In 2022, Shamil Artsuyev and his family left Ukraine for Sweden, but due to difficulties obtaining a residence permit, he returned to Russia and lived in Chechnya from November 2023. In July 2025, he returned to Vinnytsia due to his younger brother's serious illness to help him and support the business. Four months later, on his return home, he was detained by security forces, after which he was subjected to a series of administrative arrests. Relatives believe that the Ukrainian stamp in Artsuyev's passport attracted the attention of security forces.
Reports about the abduction of Chechen native Shamil Artsuyev by security forces have so far failed to help his family clarify his whereabouts and legal status. To date, his relatives have been unable to officially confirm his whereabouts or secure the opening of a criminal case for the abduction.
According to information available to his relatives, Shamil may still be held in Pretrial Detention Center No. 2 in Stary Oskol, Belgorod Oblast, where he was held, according to a former cellmate, in early March. Another person previously confirmed Artsuyev's stay in this facility, which, according to open sources and former inmates, also houses Ukrainian prisoners of war.
“Our brother is a citizen of the Russian Federation and has never held Ukrainian citizenship. His possible detention in this facility among prisoners of war contradicts his legal status and is a gross violation of the law,” Artsuyev’s brothers, Abdullah and Isa, told the “Caucasian Knot.”
When Artsuyev’s relatives inquired about his whereabouts, they received a negative response from Detention Center No. 2 in Stary Oskol. They have not yet attempted to contact other detention centers in the Belgorod Region or neighboring regions in search of their brother.
The “Caucasian Knot” also reported that FSB officers in Vladikavkaz coerced Russian citizen Roman Yevseyev, who moved to Georgia in 2022 but returned to Russia for one day in late 2025, into cooperation.
The brothers discovered that Shamil Artsuyev spent the first month after his arrest at the border in a special detention facility of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs for Vladikavkaz, where he served two consecutive 15-day administrative arrests. According to facility staff, on December 17, 2025, Artsuyev was removed from there by unidentified masked individuals who identified themselves as FSB officers. Since then, Shamil Artsuyev's whereabouts have been officially unknown. State authorities continue to deny his abduction and provide no information about his legal status.
Shamil Artsuyev is the father of five children, two of whom have disabilities, and was the sole breadwinner for his family, which has been left destitute since his disappearance. The inability to contact his family and obtain legal assistance gravely violates Artsuyev's fundamental rights, specifically the right to liberty and security of person, the right to a defense, the right to a fair trial, and the right to respect for family life, his relatives noted.
Artsuyev's relatives fear that a scenario familiar from other criminal cases could be applied to him: a person is held for an extended period without legal status, but then suddenly "discovered" and registered as a recent detainee. This practice allows the fact of illegal detention and pressure to be concealed, they noted.
"We continue to demand that my brother's actual whereabouts be established, that a lawyer be immediately granted access, that the illegal detention be stopped, that a criminal case be opened regarding his abduction, and that the actions of the officials involved be legally assessed," Artsuyev's relatives stated. They emphasized that this is a man abducted from the premises of a government agency and has been in custody for approximately four months.
Lawyer Yevgeny Smirnov, familiar with similar cases, suggested three possible scenarios for Artsuyev's detention. "It could be a series of administrative arrests, a preventive measure in a criminal case, or he could be detained for obstructing the conduct of the SVO," he stated.
The lawyer emphasized that an accurate legal assessment of the incident can only be made once Shamil Artsuyev's whereabouts are established. "In this situation, it's important to find him and understand what's going on. But this case is yet another example of how trips to Russia have ceased to be fun and have become a real challenge. Many are at risk, regardless of their involvement in politics," Smirnov concluded.
"Caucasian Knot" also reported that FSB officers in Vladikavkaz forced cooperation from Russian citizen Roman Yevseyev, who moved to Georgia in 2022 but returned to Russia for one day in late 2025. After Yevseyev signed a voluntary, confidential cooperation agreement, security officials allowed him into Georgia, but warned him not to return to Russia.
Translated automatically via Google translate from https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/422345




![Tumso Abdurakhmanov. Screenshot from video posted by Abu-Saddam Shishani [LIVE] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIR3s7AB0Uw Tumso Abdurakhmanov. Screenshot from video posted by Abu-Saddam Shishani [LIVE] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIR3s7AB0Uw](/system/uploads/article_image/image/0001/18460/main_image_Tumso.jpg)