Aleksandr Ursu with his wife (center) at one of the court hearings in their son Viktor’s case. July 2025.

Aleksandr Ursu with his wife (center) at one of the court hearings in their son Viktor’s case. July 2025.

Aleksandr Ursu with his wife (center) at one of the court hearings in their son Viktor’s case. July 2025.

Actions of Law Enforcement Officers

Lifetime of Repression: 86‑Year‑Old Aleksandr Ursu Faces Criminal Prosecution for Faith

Crimea

Aleksandr Ursu, a resident of the Crimean city of Dzhankoy, has faced repression for his faith for almost his entire life: childhood spent in exile, a series of searches in recent years, and the arrest of his son Viktor. On April 28, 2026, law enforcement officers once again searched Aleksandr's home. This time, a criminal case was opened against him.

The operation was conducted by investigator Anna Romanova, accompanied by attesting witnesses and an FSB officer. Family members report that the latter behaved aggressively; it later emerged that he had previously taken part in investigative actions in Viktor's case as well. Officers seized personal notes, mobile phones, an internet router, and flash drives. In addition, they took the elderly couple's personal savings—about 100,000 rubles.

Aleksandr has encountered similar actions by law enforcement more than once. During a search in 2018, officers used force against him: they knocked the man to the ground and twisted his arms behind his back, leaving him with abrasions and bruises. At the time, Aleksandr was 78 years old. Five years later, officers came again—this time arresting Aleksandr's son. Viktor Ursu is currently serving a six‑year prison sentence imposed by the court.

In early April 2026, the 75th anniversary of Operation "North" was marked, as the international community recalled Stalin‑era repression and the deportation of Jehovah's Witnesses to Siberia. Today, Russian law enforcement agencies have subjected nearly 1,000 Jehovah's Witnesses to criminal prosecution, at least 37 of them in Crimea.

The Case of Ursu in Dzhankoy

Case History
In the summer of 2023, 5 years after mass searches in the homes of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Dzhankoy (Crimea), law enforcement officers invaded the house of Viktor Ursu, whose father was exiled to Siberia for his faith in the late 1940s. Now Viktor has been detained for allegedly refusing to show his passport. He was charged with organizing the activity of an extremist organization because of his faith. He spent 12 days in the temporary detention facility, after which the court placed the believer under house arrest for almost a year. In August 2024, the preventive measure against the believer was changed to a recognizance agreement, and in September the case was sent to court. On September 8, 2025, Viktor Ursu was sentenced to 6 years in a penal colony with deprivation of the right to engage in activities related to leadership and participation in the work of public organizations for a period of 5 years with restriction of freedom for 1 year.
Timeline

Persons in case

Criminal case

Region:
Crimea
Locality:
Dzhankoy
Suspected of:
"discussed texts and religious positions of Jehovah's Witnesses, coordinated the activity of the congregation" (from the decision to charge)
Court case number:
12302350007000066
Initiated:
August 7, 2023
Current case stage:
the verdict entered into force
Investigating:
Investigative Department for the City of Dzhankoy of the Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation for the Republic of Crimea and the City of Sevastopol
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation:
282.2 (1)
Court case number:
1-17/2025 (1-448/2024)
Court of First Instance:
Dzhankoyskiy District Court of the Republic of Crimea
Judge of the Court of First Instance:
Yelena Nikolayeva
Case History
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