Ruzyně, remand prison
Former prison of the StB (State security) Headquarters in Prague - Ruzyně · Staré náměstí 6, 161 00 Prague …
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They stuffed pills in my mouth

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In March 1953, Ida Milotová found herself in a pre-trial prison in Prague-Ruzyně: "They invented an anti-state group that I was supposedly in charge of, lurking somewhere in the woods in the Cheb region." The group had the cover name "I" and because Mrs. Milotová's first name is "Ida," she had to be its leader. "I had the cell number 118. Every night, they took me away from my cell for the interrogation and in the morning at six o'clock, I went back to my cell but I wasn't allowed to sleep. When I closed my eyes, they would kick in the door and shout: 'don't sleep!' Thus, for eight days and eight nights I was awake," she recalled. In order to keep her sanity, Ida Milotová walked her tiny cell from the window to the door and counted the steps. By the time she had counted just over three thousand steps, she suddenly went blind on one eye. "Suddenly I fell face-down on the wall. My face hit the wall and scraped downwards on it. I felt that the wall was rough and cold but I didn't pass out. I think it happened because of the pills that they had stuffed me with. A doctor in a white coat with khaki socks and khaki pants would come to my cell regularly. He gave me some pills of the size of a current aspirin pill. He came accompanied by four guards who would hold me tight as he stuffed the pills in my mouth. At first I spat it out because I was afraid but they eventually managed to make me swallow it. I think that they used the pills in order to daze me. Eventually, I went completely blind in both eyes and I later found out that I didn't remember anything from the interrogations," she remembered. Ida Milotová didn't tell anybody about her blindness because she was afraid that they would take advantage of it during the interrogations. She eventually recovered her vision, but nevertheless she would suffer from problems with her sight for a long time after her release from prison.

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Ida Milotová, née Roučková

Ida Milotová, née Roučková

Ida Milotová, née Roučková, was born in 1928 in Karlovy Vary. She grew up in Plzeň, where her father worked for the railways being in charge of the engine shed. She graduated from a grammar school in Plzeň. After graduation, she married Zdeněk Milota, who was a member of a local resistance group during the war. After the war, he studied at the military academy and became a professional soldier. Her husband was being transferred to several different outposts and eventually served in Cheb, where the family settled down. Ida was at home with her little daughter and was in charge of the Army shop in the garrison. Because he refused to join the Communist Party, Zdeněk Milota became uncomfortable for the Communist regime. He resisted repeated provocations by the military counterintelligence, however, in March 1953, he and Ida were arrested and accused of treason and coup preparations. Ida Milotová was held in pretrial custody in Prague-Ruzyně till December 1953. In December 1953, she was sentenced by the Regional Court in Prague to 18 months in prison for misprision of felony. Cpt. Zdeněk Milota was sentenced to 22 years in prison for treason, espionage, and theft of national assets by the Higher Military Court in Prague. Ida Milotová was released under a presidential amnesty in December 1953 but her husband was imprisoned until the amnesty in 1960. After her release, she worked in the Dřevona Company.

Ruzyně, remand prison

Available in: English | Česky

In 1935 the former sugar factory was rebuilt to Provincial coercive office. Since 1948 there was a special prison of the StB, (State Security), regional office in Prague with a secret regime, later known under the codename Útvar SNB Dub, (“National Security Corps department Oak”). Mostly there were the pre-trial detentions. A lot of opponents of communism, including Václav Havel, and others who became the victims of the system, and tried to build it on their own, came through this custody.

Ruzyně, remand prison

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