Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

UN report on Sri Lanka details atrocities during the civil war


By Rohantha De Silva and K. Ratnayake -22 September 2015
A report on Sri Lanka released by the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein last Wednesday provides further evidence of atrocities committed by the Sri Lankan military during the 26-year war waged by successive Colombo governments against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

I believe report should be implemented fully - Lee Scott

I believe report should be implemented fully - Lee Scott

Lankanewsweb.net- Sep 22, 2015
Lee Scott, Ambassador of Justice for Tamils said “ I believe the High Commissioner’s Report was very explicit in its recommendations and that it should be implemented fully'' at the welcome statement from the British Tamils Forum.

He further said 'recognition of Tamils and given the same rights as everyone else is essential. I will continue with the fight for recognition of Genocide, for justice and for international involvement to ensure that this is achieved”

German foreign minister offers assistance for Sri Lankan probe of alleged war atrocities

Sri Lanka Germany -1.jpg
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier addresses the media after his meeting with Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2015. Steinmeier is on a official visit to Sri Lanka. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena) (The Associated Press)
Germany has offered assistance to Sri Lanka in its investigation of alleged atrocities during its civil war, in which thousands of people died.
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier made the offer in a meeting with his Sri Lankan counterpart on Tuesday.
Last week, the United Nations human rights chief recommended that Sri Lanka set up a special hybrid court that would include foreign judges and investigators to examine the alleged atrocities, saying Sri Lanka's own courts are not yet ready to carry out a fair judicial process.
Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said then that the country wants to conduct its own investigation but would accept some outside technical support.
Steinmeier said Tuesday that the extent of international assistance should be deliberated at the U.N. Human Rights Council.
US Congress members call for hybrid court with international judges for Sri Lankan war crimes

22 September 2015
Members of the United States Congress called for the formation of a hybrid special court with international judges, prosecutors and lawyers to try war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Sri Lanka, in a letter written to US Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday.
The letter, signed by 11 members of Congress, called for the US to “retain a strong leadership role in promoting accountability, reconciliation and a political settlement” in Sri Lanka and support recommendations from the OISL report.

“To that end we believe a UNHRC resolution supported by the US must include the recommendation calling for an “ad hoc hybrid special court, integrating international, judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators, mandated to try war crimes and crimes against humanity”,” said the letter.

“The US and the international community now have a critical role to play in ensuring accountability efforts are successful, and the recommendations of the OISL report will be implemented,” the Congress members added.

The letter concluded by stating “we must stand steadfast in our support for human rights around the world – the US has an obligation to ensure the atrocities that occurred are not repeated”.
See the full letter here.

OHCHR Report Calls for Justice and Accountability – Ravina Shamdasani

index
(Ravina Shamdasani)
Sri Lanka Brief22/09/2015
Action against LTTE financiers and other international operatives will be an integral part of the criminal investigation recommended in the OHCHR Report. The OHCHR Special Spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani called upon everyone in Sri Lanka should study the Report in depth. “This is a Report for the people of Sri Lanka. We want the people to understand the findings, understand the analysis and in that context to look at the recommendations” .

JVP calls for Truth and Reconciliation Commission to forge national unity


* Strip MPs who switch sides of their seats


by Zacki Jabbar- 


The JVP has called for the establishment of an independent domestic Truth and Reconcilation Commission which could provide relief to those affected by the war after ascertaining the truth about their allegations and grievances.

The proposal contained in a 20-point formula calling for immediate socio political reforms was handed over to President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe last week.

The broader objective of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the JVP has emphasised, should be to achieve permanent peace and unity among the various communities in the post war era.

The marxist party has also called for a ban on the practice of humiliating, ridiculing and subjecting people to injustice due to their race, religion or any other reasons. It has asked the government to appoint a Commission Against Discrimination with powers to investigate complaints and take legal action against offenders.

While reiterating the importance of abolishing the executive presidency, the JVP has drawn the government’s attention to the urgent need to safeguard the people’s franchise.

The JVP has said that the unethical practice of MPs changing sides for various considerations should be brought to an end by introducing laws to ensure that they will be deprived of their seats in the event of defecting.

Among the other proposals is a call for the abolition of the provision in the 19th Amendment, which permits an increase in the number of ministers and deputy ministers.

Ministerial subjects, the JVP has stressed, should be determined on a scientific basis through an Act of Parliament.

Sri Lanka rejects international war crimes probe

Sri Lanka's prime minister on Tuesday (Sep 22) rejected a UN call for international involvement in an investigation into alleged war crimes.


POSTED: 22 Sep 2015 
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's prime minister on Tuesday (Sep 22) rejected a UN call for international involvement in an investigation into alleged war crimes.
Ranil Wickremesinghe said talks were under way to establish a credible domestic mechanism to investigate abuses during the decades-long conflict with Tamil separatist rebels that ended in May 2009.
"There is nothing to be got from abroad," Wickremesinghe said, after a damning UN report recommended Colombo allow international experts to assist its domestic investigation.
"The media says hybrid (inquiry), but it is not hybrid," said Wickremesinghe, after UN rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein asked the government to establish "a hybrid special court, integrating international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators".
Members of Sri Lanka's Tamil minority say they do not trust a local inquiry to reach the truth about the conflict, in which more than 100,000 people died. It ended in 2009 with the defeat of rebels who had waged a long fight for a separate homeland for the Tamils.
President Maithripala Sirisena's new government has vowed to punish war criminals, in contrast to his hawkish predecessor Mahinda Rajapakse who had insisted that not a single civilian was killed by troops under his command.
Sri Lanka became an international pariah after repeatedly resisting calls for a credible probe into the horrendous crimes, including the killing of at least 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months of the war.
But in a major shift Washington last month announced it would support Colombo's plans for a domestic inquiry, which is also supported by neighbouring India.
When Sirisena came to power in January - backed strongly by the Tamils - he promised to restore human rights and the rule of law as well as mend fences with regional power India and the West.
His government has proposed a series of new measures to promote reconciliation and accountability after accusing the previous administration of breaking promises to deliver justice.
Wickremesinghe said he expected the United States to move a resolution at the ongoing UN rights council sessions backing his administration. "Discussions are going on in Geneva so I don't want to talk about it, but we hope the US will bring a consensus resolution on Sri Lanka," he said.
The new government announced last week that it would set up a South African-style truth commission, a war reparations office and a commission on missing people.
Consensus to be Key for India's Support

By Devirupa Mitra
The New Indian ExpressNEW DELHI: With Sri Lanka rejecting the US draft resolution on human rights violations and war crimes in the Island nation, it is reliably learnt that India will support a resolution, which has the ‘widest possible consensus.’
“India will support anything which is not divisive, which has the widest possible consensus,” sources told Express.
When asked if it meant that India will support a resolution with which the Maithripala Sirisena government was comfortable, sources said that if Colombo agreed to a text, then it would mean that there was consensus with countries like even China and Russia also coming on board.
When Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe met his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi on September 15 in Delhi, there was a discussion on developments in Geneva. “He (Wickremesinghe) told our PM that Sri Lanka does not want a resolution that is prescriptive,” said sources familiar with the talks.
At that time the initial draft had not been circulated, but Wickremesinghe’s language was echoed in the language used by Sri Lanka’s ambassador to Geneva, Ravintha Aryasinha, who bluntly rejected the draft tabled by the US. He termed the first draft as being ‘repetitive, judgmental and prescriptive’ and not in ‘spirit of reconciliation.’
India is not yet actively involved in proposing text changes, as many more drafts are expected before the finalized text is tabled on September 30. “We usually get deeply involved in the last days of the process,” sources added.
The report of the Office of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights  on Sri Lanka released on September 17, had called for setting up ‘hybrid courts’, but that too has not gone down well with Sri Lanka. The draft had called ‘On the Sri Lankan government” to involve “International investigators, prosecutors and Judges in Sri Lanka’s justice process” to investigate war crimes.  While the draft was not using the term ‘Hybrid Court’ as suggested by the UNHRC, the interpretation was being made on the same lines.
According to sources, ‘Hybrid Court’ does not necessarily mean an international mechanism, especially if it is one the lines of being chaired by a Sri Lankan judge and the majority in the bench are Sri Lankans. Sri Lanka have said that they are willing to take “assistance” from international partners including the office of the Human Rights Commissioner for its mechanism.
Besides the suggestion of ‘Hybrid court,’ Lanka had also objection to monitoring of the investigation by OHCHR, setting up an office of OHCHR in Colombo and “criminalization of past acts”.
In March 2014, India had abstained from voting on a resolution sponsored by the US that called for a comprehensive international probe describing it as “counterproductive” and “impractical”. It was the first time that India had abstained in three years - having voted in favour of resolutions in UNHRC in 2012 and 2013, which indicted Sri Lanka.
Intl Probe into Tamil Killings Sought
Chennai: The MDMK, VCK, Thamizhar Vazhvurimai Katchi and other Tamil outfits on Monday held protest demonstrations and rail blockades urging India to table a resolution at the UN Human Rights Council for an international criminal probe into the genocide of Sri Lankan Tamils following the findings of a UN rights and war crimes enquiry panel. The protests coincided with the demonstration in front of the UN headquarters in Geneva held by the Tamil diaspora from several European nations including Britain, Germany, France and Switzerland. MDMK and VCK held demonstrations throughout the State, while the Thamizh Vazhvurimai Katchi tried to block trains at several places.

On Genocide; An Open Letter To Sumanthiran

Colombo Telegraph

By Karthigesu Nirmalan-Nathan –September 22, 2015
Karthigesu Nirmalan-Nathan
Karthigesu Nirmalan-Nathan
Dear Mr. Sumanthiran MP,
Permit me to begin by saying, that the use of the “G” word should be measured. That said, I want to make it abundantly clear what happened in Mulliyvaikal was indeed “Genocide” and fits the definition perfectly – if you as a lawyer feel that you can’t prove it as such with the mountain of evidence available, your certificate is not worth the paper it is printed upon.
I’ve never cried Genocide for what happened to our beloved Tamil people and us as a community and citizens of “Sri Lanka.” – Yet, it is very evident that since the Sinhala Sri Riots, Sri Lanka has crossed the threshold of the G-word in every communal violence subsequent to that. You yourself was displaced twice as I recall in one of your narratives.
If it would be difficult to get a hearing at the International Criminal Court, for that is the rightful place for any “Genocide” trial to be heard, I am quite happy to have them on the docks on a watered down charge of “War-Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity” in a properly constituted hybrid court within the shores of Sri Lanka. .My wish is to get the perpetrators on the dock wherever and however possible!
However, I take it very personally when you degrade the Northern Provincial Council and our much respected Chief Minister Hon. Wigneswaran and in the process insult every member of our ethnic group – for passing the resolution asserting the actions of the then administration of Mahinda Rajapaksa (not to mention previous governments) constituted “Genocide.”
Sumanthiran
Sumanthiran
Permit me to throw some light as to why the word “Genocide” came into being. The purpose was to make the crime of mass murder of any or all of a group of people by their own government, an international offence. It is pure and simple one can never take one’s Government within the geographic boundaries of that particular country. It is worth noting at the time of the now famous Nuremburg Trial there was no law to deal with a crime of the magnitude of the holocaust. The word “genocide” was not in use before 1944. Before this was established, Winston Churchill referred to it as a crime with no name. In that year, a Polish-Jewish lawyer named Raphael Lemkin described the policies of systematic murder founded by the Nazis as genocide. The word genocide is the combination of the Greek word “geno” (meaning tribe or race) and “caedere” (the Latin word for to kill). The word is defined as a specific set of violent crimes that are committed against a certain group with the attempt to remove the entire group from existence or to destroy them. Lemkin defined genocide as follows:

Mahinda Rajapaksa says to reject OHCHR report

( September 22, 2015, Colombo, Sri lanka Guardian) Former President and Kurunegala District MP Mahinda Rajapaksa today asked the Government to reject the OHCHR report on Sri Lanka.
In his first reaction to the report released by the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR), the former President detailed the reasons why he thinks the report should be rejected.
 

Identity crisis in parliament ! who is who and what are their duties ? Sampanthan and Anura Kumara still to commence duties

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -21.Sep.2015, 11.30PM) The parliament of the united government that comprises about 90 ministers who don’t even know what their areas of official operations , duties and tasks , without a gazette notification defining them  is to meet tomorrow. This is something unprecedented in Sri Lanka’s history. 
Another  strange grotesque happening was  when the government members were being traditionally gathered together ,the  M.P.s of the UPFA who joined to form a united government  with the victorious UNP that received the mandate of the  majority of people , could not be identified with certainty by UPFA leader cum  president Maithripala Sirisena ,who was in a deep quandary therefore. 
This is because the  president told   his own MPs  that they can sit in the  opposition  if they wish ,while  the same party members sitting with  the government and the opposition is not permissible under the constitution , and parliamentary traditions.
It was reported earlier that about 40 MPs  told  their leader Maithripala Sirisena, the president that they would sit in the opposition. As  leader of the party  he ought to have  made known which is the government  group . But that was not known even yesterday night.
Based on reports reaching Lanka e news, the government MPs group meeting was postponed , and in its place the group meeting of the UNP MPs  is to be  held.The  president has agreed  to participate with the P.M.  in this meeting.
Meanwhile , the opposition leader Sambandan has still not officially commenced work at his opposition leader office.The  chief opposition whip Anura Kumara Dissanayake has also not officially started his duties at his chief opposition whip office.
To compound the confusion , the ex minister for sugar, Lakshman Seneviratne of the defeated bitter Rajapakse regime is to be sworn in as a minister tomorrow, based on unofficial sources.
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by     (2015-09-22 10:21:18)

aqsa-idfaqsa-clsh3

by Latheef Farook-September 21, 2015
logoZionist Jewish settler thugs   supported by lawless Israeli government, its military and police, entered   Islam’s third holiest Masjid Al Aqsa last week and started desecrating the masjid and beat innocent Palestinian men and women at prayer.

Aid not reaching Kobane, despite outrage over Alan Kurdi’s death 

Locals in Kobane believe aid is not reaching the devastated town because of an international failure to confront Turkey over their trade blockade
Two men ride a motor-cycle through the ruins of Kobane (MEE/Jonathan Steele) 


Jonathan Steele-Tuesday 22 September 2015
KOBANE, Syria - Alan Kurdi, the Syrian Kurdish toddler whose drowned body, face down on a Turkish beach, galvanised a wave of sympathy for Syrian refugees earlier this month, now rests beneath a grey slab of marble beside three disused cooking-oil tins where small evergreen trees have been planted.

Modi signs off on Boeing military helicopter deal before U.S. trip

Apache helicopters fly over Tahrir Square during a protest to support the army, in Cairo in this July 26, 2013 file photo.
hoto.

Forced to Clean Human Waste in India

Reuters 
The cabinet on Tuesday cleared the purchase of Boeing's (BA.N) Apache and Chinook helicopters in a deal worth around $2.5 billion, two government sources said, in a boost to defence ties with the United States.
The deal strengthens the status of the United States as one of India's top military suppliers, along with Israel, dislodging Cold War-era ally Russia from its longstanding position as the South Asian nation's main source of weapons.
The approval for 22 Apache attack and 15 heavy lift Chinook helicopters, meant to replace the military's ageing Soviet-origin choppers, came just as Prime Minister Narendra Modi heads to the United States to drum up investments into India.
"Both have been cleared, the total cost is $2.5 billion," a defence ministry source, who declined to be identified, because he is not authorised to speak to the media, told Reuters. A senior government official confirmed the decision.
The deal includes an option for 11 more Apaches and seven more Chinooks, an industry source with knowledge of the matter said.
India was the top foreign buyer of U.S. arms in 2013, says defense research firm IHS Janes, and the two governments are now negotiating a series of defense collaboration projects.
The two sides ended negotiations on the helicopters months ago, but budget constraints held up the deal. After India's finance ministry gave the green light last week, the cabinet committee on security, headed by Modi, gave its approval on Tuesday, the defence ministry source said.
Boeing kept the price of the helicopters stable, despite inflation, extending it over deadlines more than 10 times, said the industry source, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the subject.
In August, the price assurance was extended until Sept. 30, so India had to sign off on the deal before then, the source added.
The Indian Air Force picked the Apache and Chinook helicopters over Russian competitors in 2012. The Chinooks are to be part of a new mountain corps the army is putting together with the intent of deploying it on the border with China.
The two countries fought a brief border war in 1962.

(Additional reporting and writing by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Malini Menon and Clarence Fernandez)

China says, ‘Foreign media welcome.’ But the harassment continues.

Journalists cover the opening of the third plenary session of the 12th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in Shanghai in 2014. (Johannes Eisele/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images)
 
BEIJING — As President Xi Jinping pays a much-anticipated state visit to the United States this week, Beijing wants to show Washington that it is playing nice with the Western media. For the first time in nearly three years, China will grant fresh work visas to two reporters from the New York Times.
“Foreign media welcome,” the state-run China Daily proclaimed in a front-page banner headline Saturday, quoting Xi talking to visiting News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch.
But although Xi reportedly told Murdoch last week that news outlets abroad can “boost mutual understanding and cooperation,” the Wall Street Journal’s English- and Chinese-language Web sites remain blocked here, as do those of the New York Times, Reuters and Bloomberg News.
And around China, suspicion of foreign journalists remains high. Efforts to prevent them from reporting freely are common, as a recent trip to the Chinese city of Horgos on the border with Kazakhstan demonstrated.
A Washington Post team was expressly told we were not welcome there, with Yang Jihong, the local propaganda department director, instructing police to detain us until three colleagues arrived to “escort” us around a free-trade zone straddling the border.
 
“You can’t interview traders,” insisted one of those officials, a man who said he was not carrying any identification but whose black T-shirt somewhat incongruously proclaimed the word “Happiness” in English. He did not let us out of his sight for the next several hours, before ordering us to accompany him in a police car to have our press cards and passports checked for the fifth time.
“If you compare the lot of a foreign correspondent in China in the 1990s with today, then obviously a great deal has changed for the better,” said Jo Floto, president of the Foreign Correspondents Club of China (FCCC). “But since the [2008] Olympics, progress has stalled and, on some issues, gone into reverse.
“As a resident international journalist, you are still very likely to experience harassment by the security forces during your time in China. Our members continue to report the intimidation of their sources, interviewees and local staff by the police or their proxies.”
The New York Times’s problems date to a 2012 article about the wealth of then-Prime Minister Wen Jiabao. Authorities retaliated by denying visas for new journalists trying to enter China, although the Times was allowed to renew visas for employees already here.
The Times staff members who are now promised visas are being allowed in on the condition that two other reporters leave the country. It is too soon to say whether the latest move represents a permanent reprieve for the Times or a temporary measure to take the issue off the agenda during Xi’s state visit.
Recently, other Times journalists, as well as a senior executive, were denied short-term visas to enter China on reporting and business trips.
 
“We’ve been working closely with the Foreign Ministry to resolve this problem and have recently seen some progress,” Times spokeswoman Danielle Rhoades Ha said, adding that the newspaper hopes “to resume a normal rotation of correspondents in and out of China as soon as possible.”
The Washington Post has not experienced problems obtaining Chinese journalist residence visas since correspondent Andrew Higgins was denied one from 2009 to 2012. But the day-to-day experience of reporting in China is increasingly challenging.
Important sources, including activistsintellectuals and independent-minded lawyers, have been locked up since Xi took power. Others have gone to ground, reluctant to be seen talking to the Western media or specifically told not to.
On reporting trips to the troubled western region of Xinjiang and to Inner Mongolia in the past year, Washington Post teams were followed, detained and prevented from talking to local residents.
Restrictions on Chinese reporters are much more severe: Journalist Gao Yu, 71, was sentenced in April to seven years in prison for supposedly leaking state secrets; in August, state television aired a “confession” from Wang Xialou, a reporter from a respected business magazine, for allegedly contributing to the stock market crash by causing panic among investors. Censorship in the country is among the most severe in the world, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
A survey in the FCCC’s latest annual report, issued in May, found that of 117 reporters who responded, 96 percent said working conditions for foreign media did not meet international standards, while 33 percent said conditions had deteriorated in the past year.
Foreign journalists are sometimes criticized for painting too negative a picture of China, of paying too much attention to human rights abuses and of missing the longer-term trends that have helped lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty in the past three decades.
But in Horgos, The Post was trying to report on a story the government should have welcomed: Xi’s initiative to revive ancient trading routes to Central Asia under the banner of a new Silk Road. Still, the “Happiness” man and his colleagues could not shake off their suspicion of the Western media.
Simon Denyer is The Post’s bureau chief in China. He served previously as bureau chief in India and as a Reuters bureau chief in Washington, India and Pakistan.

Migrant crisis: EU ministers agree plan


TUESDAY 22 SEPTEMBER 2015
Channel 4 NewsEuropean ministers agree a plan to share out 120,000 asylum seekers across the EU, despite opposition from former communist countries.

(Above: Croatian police and migrants scuffle at a reception centre on the Croatia/Serbia border)
The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania opposed the plan for a pan-EU quota system, but they were out-voted by other member states at a meeting of European interior ministers in Brussels.
At an emergency summit on Wednesday, EU leaders will focus on aid for Syrian refugees in Turkey and the Middle East and tightening border controls to stem the flow of people fleeing war and poverty.
The UN refugee agency said EU plans to absorb 120,000 refugees would not work unless reception centres were provided for tens of thousands at any time.

Surge

Nearly half a million people have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe this year, two-fifths of them from Syria, in a surge that has overwhelmed countries like Greece and Hungary.
Germany has agreed to accept 800,000 migrants this year and wants other countries to sign up to mandatory quotas, but former communist states in eastern Europe are opposed.
EU officials are hoping to achieve agreement on financial aid for Turkey, Jordan and other countries housing 4 million Syrian refugees.
The European Commission said last week it was ready to earmark 1 billion euros for Turkey, more than five times what has already been allocated for the 2 million refugees there.
A senior official told Reuters: "Europe wants to take its share of refugees and will do, but Syrians should stay as close as possible to their homes."

Trial of Ukrainian pilot accused of murdering Russian journalists begins

Nadiya Savchenko stands trial despite international fears that the charges have been fabricated for political reasons

T in Moscow-Tuesday 22 September 2015
The murder trial of Ukrainian pilot Nadiya Savchenko has begun despite international condemnation and accusations that the charges have been fabricated for political purposes.
Savchenko – the best known Ukrainian citizen currently being held in Russia – isaccused of directing artillery fire that killed two Russian journalists, Igor Kornelyuk and Anton Voloshin, during fighting in eastern Ukraine. She faces 25 years in prison on charges of murder, attempted murder and illegally crossing the border.
Savchenko and some western countries have said she should be considered a prisoner of war. The parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe approved Savchenko as a member of the Ukrainian delegation in January, a position that entitles her to international immunity from prosecution.
Prosecutors at the trial in Donetsk in the Rostov region of Russia said on Tuesday that Savchenko, the first female military pilot in post-Soviet Ukraine, was working as a spotter for Ukrainian forces near Luhansk in June 2014. Motivated by “hatred and hostility towards … the civilian population of Luhansk region”, they said she called in an artillery strike on a rebel checkpoint where civilians and journalists were present. Investigators have claimed she was later detained after she crossed into Russia as a refugee without documents.
Savchenko has denied the charges and said she was captured by rebels in June 2014 and handed over to Russian authorities. Dressed in a Ukrainian folk costume and looking healthier than after her 80-day hunger strike earlier this year, Savchenko told the court that her case had been fabricated by the investigative committee.
“Never in my life have I fired at unarmed people. I have never been a spotter,” she told the court. At one point she said “Glory to Ukraine”, a rallying cry often heard during the protests that ousted the former president Viktor Yanukovychand during the ensuing conflict in eastern Ukraine.
Savchenko spoke and gestured to her sister, Vera, through the glass of the dock. Only Russian state television journalists were allowed into the courtroom, with the rest having to watch the proceedings on a live video feed.
Irina Voloshina, Voloshin’s widow, testified via videolink, but could offer little detail about whether her husband took the proper safety precautions.
Savchenko told Voloshin’s father, who also testified, that she did not kill his son but was sorry for his loss. “Our guys also died,” she said.
It is widely expected that a guilty verdict will be delivered. Last month, a Russian court sentenced Oleg Sentsov, a pro-Ukrainian film director from Crimea, to 20 years in prison over accusations that he planned terrorist acts after the peninsula was annexed by Russia last year. Amnesty International described proceedings as “redolent of Stalinist-era show trials”. His alleged accomplice, activist Alexander Kolchenko, was sentenced to 10 years.
Earlier this month, the European parliament adopted a resolution condemning the “abduction, illegal detention and sentencing” of Savchenko, Sentsov and Kolchenko, as well as Estonian security agent Eston Kohver, who was captured in ambiguous circumstances on the border last year. It demanded their release and called on the EU to place sanctions on officials responsible for their prosecution.
The US and Britain have argued that Savchenko’s detention is a violation of the Minsk peace plan struck in February, under which Russia and Ukraine agreed to exchange all hostages and unlawfully detained people.
Ukraine has sought the help of David Cameron, the British prime minister, and other leaders in securing Savchenko’s release but has shied away from a prisoner swap. It had previously been speculated that Sentsov and Savchenko could be swapped for two Russian special forces soldiers captured by government forces in eastern Ukraine, but the president, Petro Poroshenko, said in an interview this month that this was “not a topic of exchange”.