Ukrainian police have opened an investigation into the kidnapping of an opposition activist, who said he was held captive for more than a week and tortured.

It was the latest in a string of mysterious attacks on anti-government protesters in the two-month-long political crisis.

Dmytro Bulatov, 35, a member of Automaidan, a group of car owners that has taken part in the protests against President Viktor Yanukovych, went missing on January 22.

He was discovered outside Kiev on Thursday. He said his kidnappers beat him badly, drove nails against his hands, sliced off a piece of ear and cut his face. He was kept in the dark all the time and could not identify the kidnappers. After more than a week of beatings, they eventually dumped him in a forest.

“They crucified me, they nailed down my hands. They cut off my ear, they cut my face. There isn’t a spot on my body that hasn’t been beaten,” Mr Bulatov said on Channel 5 television.

“Thank God, I am alive.”

His face and clothes were covered in clotted blood, his hands were swollen and bore the marks of nails.

Opposition leader Petro Poro­shenko rushed to the hospital where Bulatov was taken on Thursday night.

They crucified me, they nailed down my hands

“Dmytro asked to pass his greetings to everyone and to say that he has not been broken and will not

be broken,” a grim-looking Poro­shenko said. “That he is full of energy and despite the fact that his body was been beaten, Dmitry’s spirit is strong.”

Police said the car he was driving when he disappeared had been found.

He had been missing for eight days, and the protesters organised a campaign for his release. They pleaded with top government officials for assistance and offered a bounty to anyone who could help find him, said Oleksiy Hrytsenko, Bulatov’s friend and fellow activist.

Hrytsenko said Automaidan members had come under tremendous pressure during the protests, with their cars burnt and activists detained, harassed and threatened. He showed a reporter a text message he had received from an unknown number that read: “Go ahead, go ahead, your mother will be happy to see her son dead.”

Bulatov is among three activists whose disappearances have shocked the country, especially after one of them was found dead.

He went missing one day after Igor Lutsenko, another prominent opposition activist who had also gone missing, was discovered after being taken to the woods and beaten severely by unknown attackers.

Lutsenko was kidnapped from a hospital, where he had brought a fellow protester, Yuri Verbitsky, to be treated for an eye injury. Mr Verbitsky was also beaten severely and later discovered dead.

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