Nadiya Savchenko on trial
Nadiya Savchenko on trial in Donetsk, Russia on Feb 1, 2016 (Susan Ormiston, CBC)
The following is an extensive report on the opening day, February 1, 2016, of the trial in Russia of Ukrainian right-wing extremist paramilitary Nadiya Savchenko. The report is by Susan Ormiston, European correspondent of Canada's state broadcaster, CBC.

The CBC was apparently one of the few, if only, Western media outlets to attend the opening day of the trial. The CBC report is one of the few published in English. Susan Ormiston's lengthy report contains a large number of photos.

The CBC reporter fills her report with the usual Western media bias, including:
  • The rebel forces in eastern Ukraine (Donetsk and Lugansk regions, aka Donbas) fighting for autonomy and democracy, against the violent civil war imposed by the governing regime in Kyiv beginning April 2014, are labelled "pro-Russia separatists".
  • Even though Nadiya Savchenko is accused of complicity in the murder of two Russian journalists, the CBC reporter's sympathies lie entirely with the accused killer, not with Ormiston's Russian journalist colleague victims.
  • In her ever-so-brief mention of the July 17, 2014 crash of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, and notwithstanding the absence of any proof two years later of Russian government involvement, the CBC reporter references "finger-pointing at Russia" in explaining the crash.
  • And so on.
But the CBC reporter also loads her own bias into her reporting:
  • The headline of the article reports Nadiya Savchenko as a "Ukrainian airforce pilot". Yes but no. Savchenko took a leave of absence (other reports say 'holiday') from the Ukrainian military in the spring of 2014 in order to join one of the right-wing extremist paramilitary battalions leading the charge in waging civil war in eastern Ukraine. She joined the 'Aidar Battalion'. Savchenko resigned from the armed forces in November 2014 following her appointment to the Ukrainian Rada (Parliament). According to her lawyer, this was to hopefully facilitate a release from Russian detention.
  • Ormiston reports that Savchenko was "elected in absentia to the Rada" in October 2014. Yes and no. She was not "elected". She was appointed to the Rada following the election of Oct. 26, 2014 by the Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) electoral machine of the billionaire, former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko. In Ukraine's electoral system, parties that obtain more than five per cent of the vote appoint approximately half the seats to the Rada, proportional to the votes they receive. Would the ultra-nationalist Nadiya Savchenko win election to the Rada in a direct vote? In western Ukraine, without doubt. In eastern or southern Ukraine, maybe not.
  • Ormiston reports in print and in her Feb 1 CBC Radio News report (The World At Six, no podcast easily available) of Savchenko's leave/holiday to join the military offensive in eastern Ukraine and says Savchenko joined a "volunteer battalion". What is a "volunteer battalion" in Ukraine? Sounds like a soup kitchen brigade, or maybe a 'battalion' for building social housing. But no, the term "volunteer battalion" with reference to Ukraine is Western media-speak for "extreme-right or neo-Nazi paramilitary battalion waging war on the people of eastern Ukraine". Oh, and it so happens that the Advocate General of Ukraine has recently said in an interview that those "volunteer battalions" which have declined to integrate into the Ukrainian armed forces or National Guard, such as neo-Nazi Right Sector, should be declared illegal under Ukraine's constitution. But the battalions are one step ahead; most have opted to integrate, not least because that gives them access to the training and arms being so generously provided by the military missions in Ukraine of the U.S., UK and Canada (themselves illegal under Ukraine's constitution until the Rada conveniently voted in April 2015 to alter that clause of the constitution).
  • The CBC reporter does not investigate or explain the circumstances of how Nadiya Savchenko ended up firing mortars against the people of eastern Ukraine (and allegedly killing two Russian journalists). Had she done so, she would have uncovered a political fanatic. Savchenko took her leave/holiday from the military and went into action in eastern Ukraine because, like many of her fellow paramilitaries, she was angry and frustrated with the slow pace of the civil war being waged. In the early stages of the civil war, many Ukrainian army soldiers refused to follow orders to shoot, shell and and otherwise attack civilians. This was one of the origins of the rise of the extremist paramilitary battalions in Ukraine. They stepped into the breach to supplant the role of recalcitrant regular army soldiers. Savchenko has said that she wanted Ukraine to declare all-out war with Russia. (Of note along the same lines, when Crimea voted in March 2014 to secede from Ukraine, a large majority of the members of the Ukrainian armed forces serving in Crimea at the time accepted the offer to join the Russian armed forces.)
Fate of Nadiya Savchenko, jailed Ukrainian air force pilot, in hands of Kremlin, say lawyers

By Susan Ormiston, CBC News, Feb 1, 2016
Nadiya Savchenko is testifying today in a case that has become a potent symbol in the war between Ukraine and pro-Russia separatist [sic] rebels.

Russian investigators have charged the Ukrainian air force pilot with complicity in the 2014 deaths of two Russian journalists, which she denies. "I am a soldier," she told the court in Donetsk, Russia, Monday. "You are treating me like a murderer."

The 34-year-old lieutenant testified for more than four hours, much of it a monologue about her military history and her movements on June 17, 2014, the day of the fatal mortar attack. "I ask that you listen to me carefully, don't interrupt me and don't shut me up, because each of my words will have significance for this court," she said, addressing the judge.

"Every single word I speak here will be the truth. I am again asking for a lie detector test that will be further proof of my truth, but you will again refuse me this."

There were few interruptions from her legal team during her testimony and almost no questions from the prosecutors. This was her stage: a glass cage with open slats that she spoke through.

Phone records key to timeline

Savchenko's lawyers are expected to introduce evidence that mobile phone monitoring by Ukraine's special forces picked up conversations from pro-Russia separatists [sic] on the day of the attack, at 10:46 a.m., reporting that they had captured a female sniper.

TV journalists Anton Voloshin and Igor Kornelyuk were killed later that morning, closer to noon, near Luhansk, eastern Ukraine. Therefore, Savchenko's lawyers argue, she couldn't have been involved in co-ordinating the mortar attack as she was already in the hands of the rebels.

Still, despite what they think is solid proof that Savchenko was not involved, her lawyers, two of whom defended the punk rock band Pussy Riot against charges stemming from their performance of a song critical of Russian President Vladimir Putin, do not expect her to get a fair trial.

"This Donetsk court, it has no power to acquit Savchenko," said attorney Mark Feygin outside court Monday. "They don't have that power, and no one will give them that power — even in front of all the evidence that she is innocent. ...

"This decision will be taken by the Kremlin, and the Kremlin will decide what is in their political interests and not for justice in their court of law and fairness, which is supposed to exists in these places."

Savchenk also strongly voiced her opposition to the judicial process that will determine her fate. "I don't believe you have a right to try me and certainly not in a Russian court. This court is criminal," she said during her testimony Monday.

The trial is taking place 1,000 kilometres from Moscow, which Savchenko's lawyers say is proof that Russian authorities want her case kept out of the public eye, even thought it will be Moscow who makes the ultimate decision, said Ilya Novikov, a member of Savchenko's legal team.

"Here in Russia, we like show trials. [It's] almost a tradition since Stalin's era," Novikov said. "This verdict is not to be written by the judges. It's already [been] written in Moscow."

But on Monday, Russian and Ukrainian media — as well as CBC — were given access to the proceedings and were allowed to film Savchenko and her lawyers, although not the prosecutors or the judge. Four balaclava-clad, armed, Russian special forces officers kept a close eye on the media.

Throughout her various court hearings and trial appearances over the 18 months that she has been detained, Savchenko has often worn traditional Ukrainian blouses — in a gesture of defiance — and she did so again on Monday.

Her sister, Vera, drove the 900 kilometres from Kyiv to attend the trial. "I see my sister. I don't see the cage," she said outside the court. "No matter how hard the Russian Federation tries to push their propaganda, the truth will ultimately come out. That brings me calm watching over Nadiya."

The families of the two Russian journalists did not attend Monday's proceedings.

7th week of 2nd hunger strike

Savchenko has been vocal in court in the past, yelling "Lies!" at the prosecutors. That fiery spirit is probably what has kept her alive. She is starving herself to protest what she believes is a trumped-up case that Russia cannot lose.

In prison for a year and a half now, first in Moscow then in Rostov-on-Don, in southern Russia, Savchenko is in the seventh week of a hunger strike, taking only fluids. Her first hunger strike last winter in Moscow nearly killed her.

"Hunger is my only weapon in the fight against the outrageous actions of the Russian authorities," she said in a letter released by her lawyer.

Throughout her ordeal, Savchenko has been called both a "hero of Ukraine" and a "daughter of the devil" — as well as plenty of other names.

Her controversial trial, which began last July, resumed this week and is taking place a mere 10 kilometres from Russia's border with Ukraine and about 200 kilometres east of the other Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine, which has been at the centre of a nearly two-year-old war between pro-Russia separatists and the Ukrainian army.

Heated battle preceded capture

Savchenko's journey to the courtroom in the small Russian town of Donetsk has been as twisted and loaded with claims and counterclaims as any spy novel.

She was among the protestors in Maidan, Kyiv's central square, in 2013 during the overthrow of President Viktor Yanukovych. In the summer of 2014, she took a week's leave from her regular job as a helicopter navigator and pilot to help train a volunteer battalion fighting along with Ukrainian forces in eastern Ukraine.

Fighting between Ukrainian nationalists and pro-Russian separatists in the region was intense that summer. According to her lawyers, on June 17, 2014, Savchenko went to the aid of some wounded fighters who had been caught in an ambush. Her sister helped transport several of the wounded to safety in her car, leaving Nadiya behind.

When her sister returned, Savchenko was gone. Vera made several frantic calls to Savchenko's cellphhone, fearing she had been killed. Eventually, she said, a man's voice answered and said "slaughterhouse," and it was clear to her then that Savchenko had been captured by rebels.

Later, a cellphone video, believed to be taken with Savchenko's phone, was released by the rebels. It shows her chained to a metal chair being interrogated.

"Who is targeting us?" asks one of the rebels, repeatedly. "All of Ukraine," she replies cooly.

U.S., Canada condemn detention

The same day as her capture, three journalists from Russian state broadcaster VGTRK were caught up in shelling near Luhansk, and two of them — Voloshin and Kornelyuk — died. (Russian authorities allege it was a Ukrainian mortar that killed the two and that Savchenko provided the co-ordinates that allowed Ukrainian forces to locate the journalists.)

Savchenko's family says that two weeks later, they discovered she had been driven across the border to Russia. "They put a stinky bag over her head and transported her in six different cars," Savchenko's mother, Maria, told media in February 2015.

Moving a prisoner of war across international borders is prohibited by international law, but Russia contends Savchenko snuck into Russia pretending to be a refugee and was arrested on Russian soil.

In the super-charged atmosphere of 2014, with the downing of Flight MH17 in Ukraine and the finger pointing at Russia [sic], Savchenko became a cause célèbre for Ukrainians. Activists started a "Free Savchenko" blog on Facebook. The Ukrainian activist group Voices of Ukraine, which grew out of the Maidan protest movement and focuses on providing news about Ukraine in English and other languages, translated Savchenko's letters from prison.

"One of the fronts of this war is words and propaganda, so the only way to counter it is getting the truth out there," said Sophia Isajiw, founding editor of Voices Ukraine, speaking from Toronto.

In a recent letter, Savchenko wrote "I'm alive and free as long as I act and I don't sit here. I keep fighting."

Savchenko as symbol

A young, female military pilot is novel enough; by 2015, Savchenko was being labelled Joan of Arc, and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko awarded her the country's highest award for bravery. She was elected in absentia to Ukraine's parliament.

Sound engineer Anton Voloshin died along with Kornelyuk in the mortar attack. VGTRK cameraman Viktor Denisov survived the attack. (Rossiya Television/Associated Press)

Her case has garnered attention across Europe and North America, including in Canada.

"Canada and this house should join our American and European allies and pass a resolution demanding Nadiya's immediate return to Ukraine," said then Liberal MP Chrystia Freeland, who is now minister of international trade.

The U.S. State Department similarly called on Russia to drop what it called its "baseless case" against Savchenko.

A new ceasefire agreement between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russia separatists was signed in Minsk in February 2015. In April of last year, the president of the European Council, Donald Tusk, reiterated the need to fully implement the deal and said the EU expects "the urgent release of all hostages, including Nadiya Savchenko."[1]

Nevertheless, Russia is proceeding with all charges against her. There has been talk of political negotiations to secure her release, but some Russia watchers suggest no deal could be reached until Russia has prosecuted a guilty verdict.
Notes

[1] The CBC reporter 'neglects' to mention that the Ukrainian government has failed to implement prisoner exchanges stemming from its bloody military campaign launched in eastern Ukraine in April 2014. Prisoner exchange is but one of the terms of the 12-point Minsk-2 ceasefire agreement which the governing regime in Kyiv has refused to implement.

Read also

Campaign to free Nadiya Savchenko another cover-up of war crimes and pretext for more sanctions against Russia, by the editors, New Cold War.org, May 1, 2015