Defiant in her closing
statement on Wednesday to a Russian court, Ukrainian pilot Nadezhda
Savchenko brandished her middle finger, burst into the Ukrainian
national anthem and declared her trial in the death of two Russian
journalists to be "the farce of Kremlin puppets."
Savchenko denies the allegation, and the
Ukrainian government says she was abducted by Russia and should be
treated as a prisoner of war. The
judge said he would begin reading the verdict on March 21, a procedure
expected to take two days. Her lawyers say that conviction is a foregone
conclusion; the only question is if the court will impose the 23 years
in prison sought by prosecutors.
In protest of repeated delays in
court proceedings, Savchenko last week announced a hunger strike. In
court on Wednesday, she appeared pale, clad in a T-shirt displaying the
trident that is Ukraine's national emblem.
"In Russia, there are
no courts and no investigations. Here there is only the farce of Kremlin
puppets" Savchenko told the court. "If you want to show your strength,
go ahead. But remember, we are playing with my life. The stakes are high
and I have nothing to lose."
International attention to the case
included sharp criticism from US Vice President Joe Biden, who on
Tuesday called for her immediate release and said her health is
deteriorating because of the hunger strike.
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's spokesperson, Steffan Seibert, also called for her
release and said that Savchenko was subject to "questionable
interrogation methods and breaches of international standards."
A
group of European Parliament lawmakers has pushed for the EU to levy
more sanctions against Russian President Vladimir Putin and other
Russian lawmakers, in part because of the handling of the Savchenko
case. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Ukrainian counterpart
Pavlo Klimkin on Wednesday spoke about Ukraine's demand that Ukrainian
doctors be able to visit Savchenko.
Finish with dignity
A Foreign Ministry statement said Lavrov rejected the appeal because of her "insulting" statement to the court. Until
the next court appearance, Savchenko won't be allowed to have
visitations with her family, Ukrainian counsels or Ukrainian doctors,
according to Polozov.
About 2 000 Ukrainians rallied in central
Kiev on Sunday to demand that Russia release Savchenko, and the
officer's ongoing imprisonment has sparked outrage in the international
community as well.
Savchenko lawyer Mark Feygin has expressed hope
that the Kremlin could allow her to serve out her sentence in Ukraine,
which is legal under Russian law.
"It is the only way, not just to
stop [her] hunger strike, but also to finish the case with dignity,"
Feygin told journalists on Wednesday. Russian Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Maria Zakharova told reporters on Wednesday that
negotiation on any decision concerning Savchenko's future won't happen -
in theory or practice - until the verdict is pronounced.
Such an
arrangement could also depend on the results of the trial in Ukraine of
two Russians who were captured in eastern Ukraine and charged with being
Russian soldiers.
However, that trial on Wednesday was postponed
for a week because the lawyer for one of the men didn't appear, and a
lawyer for the other said he had not been reachable by telephone for two
days.
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