Sergei Dolgov
Sergei Dolgov, also transliterated as Sergey or Serhiy,, was a Ukrainian journalist from Russia who served as editor for the Vestnik Pryazovya and Khochu v SSSR in Mariupol, Ukraine before he went missing. He was notorious for promoting neo-Sovietism and criticism of the state of Ukraine in contrast to what it was when it was part of the Soviet Union. Many press organizations suspect that his disappearance is in fact a murder.
Personal
Much of Dolgov's personal life is unknown. Dolgov was married to Olga Dolgova who expressed great concern for his safety and believed in September 2014 that her husband was being held at military base A1978 in Zaporizhzhia.Career
Sergei Dolgov was the chief editor of two Russian-language newspapers Vestnik Pryazovya and Khochu v SSSR, in Mariupol.Disappearance
Dolgov was abducted from the Vestnik Pryazovya office on the afternoon of 18 June 2014 by six masked men in civilian dress with automatic weapons. The perpetrators took computers. They beat Dolgov and then took him away with his hands tied. Colleagues of Dolgov think his abduction was linked to his editing of Khochu v SSSR, which mainly published historical articles about the Soviet era and which was considered by some Ukrainian newspapers a "separatist" publication. His whereabouts and the identity and motive of his abductors remained unknown for five days.Konstatin Dolgov, who is also a leader of the pro-separatist People's Front of Novorossiya movement, added that his namesake had been "tortured" by kidnappers, saying "the enhanced interrogation ended in the death of the journalist." According to employees of Vestnik Priazovya, Dolgov had been missing since mid-June when masked men armed with automatic rifles barged into their editorial offices in the eastern Ukrainian town of Mariupol and abducted Dolgov, tying up his hands with wire. Serhiy Spasitel, the head of the Mariupol regional branch of the Ukrainian Security Service, said a few days later that Dolgov was alive and well, but that questions about his specific whereabouts should be addressed to Ukraine's Anti-Terror Center — the SBU agency in charge of combating the separatist movement in the country's east. Mariupol Prosecutor Serhiy Reznitsky also denied any knowledge of the supposed abduction, saying police and prosecutors "do not always know what is happening "