People were on their way to Rostov-on-Don for a court hearing in the "Hizb ut-Tahrir case".
In Crimea, Russian occupation authorities unlawfully detained 120 Ukrainian citizens of Crimean Tatar origin.
Ukrainian law enforcement in response to the incident have opened criminal proceedings in this regard, the press service of the Ministry of Internal Affairs reports.
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Ukrainian police have qualified the act as "illegal deprivation of liberty" and launched the relevant probe.
The Criminal Code provides for up to five years in prison for those found guilty of committing the said crime.
Earlier reports said the Russian State Traffic Inspectorateoperatives in the occupied Crimea had been unlawfully holding nearly 120 Crimean Tatars on the Kerch bridge for about nine hours.
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A group of Crimean Tatars from Bakhchisarai, Staryi Krym, Sudak, Belogorsk, Dzhankoy, and Simferopol were blocked on the Kerch bridge. The traffic police took their IDs for verification and photographed their passports.
They were held at sub-zero temperatures with no hot drinks or food provided.
Repression against Crimean Tatars
The defendants of the Belogorsk group in the so-called "Hizb ut-Tahrir case" are Enver and Riza Omerovs, as well as Ayder Dzhapparov.
They were detained in the summer of 2019.
The Russian prosecution demanded 19 years in prison for Enver Omerov and 13 years for his son Rezi Omerov, as well as 18 years for Dzhapparov.