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Addendum to the report | Doc. 14015 Add. | 20 April 2016
The humanitarian concerns with regard to people captured during the war in Ukraine
Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced Persons
1. Events leading to the trial and sentencing of Ms Nadiia Savchenko
1. Ms Nadiya Savchenko, a Ukrainian
military pilot and, subsequently, member of the Verkhovna Rada and of
the Ukrainian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly, participated
in the anti-terrorist operation in eastern Ukraine as a member of
the territorial defence battalion “Aydar”. On 17 June 2014, she
was captured by separatists near the village of Metalist (Lugansk
province). On 30 June 2014, she was placed under arrest in the Russian
Federation, where, according to the Russian authorities, she had
travelled of her own accord on 23 June 2014. Ms Savchenko was taken
to a detention facility in Voronezh on 8 July 2014.
2. According to her own statements, confirmed by the Ukrainian
officials, after being captured by separatists in Lugansk province,
Ms Savchenko was taken across the border against her will and handed
over to Russian intelligence officers.
3. The court ordered her arrest on the 16th day
of her illegal detention. Ms Savchenko was charged with aiding and
abetting the killing of Russian journalists. In September 2014, she was transferred
to the Serbsky Institute in Moscow to undergo involuntary psychiatric
and psychological assessment. Ms Savchenko was declared in good
mental health on 30 October 2014 and transferred to a pretrial detention
facility.
4. Ms Savchenko denied all charges against her and accused the
Russian authorities of kidnapping her and fabricating a political
case against her.
5. The Ukrainian Government considers Ms Savchenko as one of
the citizens who should be released in accordance with the Minsk
Agreements. On 19 November 2014, Nadiya Savchenko was registered
by the Central Election Commission as a member of the Verkhovna
Rada, having been elected in absentia.
6. In December 2014, the Security Service of Ukraine provided
Nadiya Savchenko’s defence team with a report containing communication
data generated by Ms Savchenko’s mobile phone and the phones of
the journalists who died on 17 June 2014. On the basis of this information,
the location of Ms Savchenko and of the journalists on the first
half of the day of the incident could be established, in particular
the fact that Ms Savchenko had already been captured for several
hours and kept in central Lugansk at the time when the journalists
were killed.
7. On 15 December 2014, Ms Savchenko started a hunger strike
in protest against the falsification of charges, her illegal incarceration
and the lack of medical treatment in the pretrial detention centre.
8. On 26 January 2015, Ms Savchenko was appointed as a member
of the Ukrainian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly. The Assembly,
in its Resolution 2034
(2015), recognised Ms Savchenko’s parliamentary immunity as
a member of the delegation of the Verkhovna Rada to the Assembly
(a decision rejected by the Russian Federation) and called for her
immediate release. Moreover, in its opinion for the Bureau of the
Assembly, the
Committee on Rules of Procedure, Immunities and Institutional Affairs
stated that Ms Savchenko enjoys European parliamentary immunity
as a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,
according to the provisions of the General Agreement on Privileges
and Immunities of the Council of Europe, since the ratification
of the credentials of the Ukrainian delegation on 26 January 2015.
9. The trial of Ms Savchenko's case began in September 2015,
in Donetsk. Ms Savchenko denied the charges while the defence presented
evidence showing that she was captured before the attack in which
she was allegedly involved.
10. According to Amnesty International, during the trial, the
Russian court constantly violated the principles of a fair trial
procedure by rejecting the evidence of the defence and relying on
testimonies of unidentified witnesses. The judge rejected the testimony
of the alibi of Ms Savchenko presented by her defence, as well as mobile
phone records proving that she was already in captivity when the
journalists were killed.
11. The position of the Russian court is in violation of the European
Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, “the Convention”), which
guarantees the right to a fair trial, including the right of the
defendant “to examine or have examined witnesses against him and
to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses on his behalf
under the same conditions as witnesses against him” (Article 6.30.d of the Convention and Article 14.3.e of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)).
12. According to leading human rights defending organisations,
the trial of Ms Savchenko was highly politicised and constitutes a violation of fair
trial standards. The result of this trial was easy to predict, as
the prosecution had never investigated the allegations made by Ms
Savchenko.
13. Consequently, on 22 March 2016, the Russian Rostov Region
court found Ms Savchenko guilty of abetting the murder of the Russian
television journalists Anton Voloshin and Igor Kornelyuk on 17 June
2014, during the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine, and convicted
her to 22 years in prison with a 30 000 ruble (US$450) fine. She
was also convicted of the attempted murder of civilians and of illegally
crossing the Ukrainian-Russian border as a refugee. Ms Savchenko
and her defence team announced that they would not appeal the verdict,
which they considered a judicial farce.
14. On 5 April 2016, the judgment came into effect. In protest,
Ms Savchenko has started a new hunger strike.
2. Reactions of the international community to the court’s verdict
15. The abduction, illegal detention
and political motivation of the investigation and court proceedings
as well as the final verdict have given rise to strong condemnations
by international organisations, governments as well as non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) and individuals.
16. The Unites States Senate and the European Parliament adopted
resolutions calling for the immediate release of Ms Savchenko.
17. International pressure over the Savchenko case increased further
as Lithuania followed Ukraine in issuing a formal “Savchenko List”
of 46 Russian and Ukrainian persons banned from travelling to Lithuania
over the pilot’s imprisonment.
18. Following the verdict, the Prosecutor General’s Office of
Ukraine opened two criminal proceedings against Russian judges and
prosecutors involved in the sentencing of Ms Savchenko. The Ukrainian authorities
approved sanctions against 84 Russian individuals involved in the
trial of Ms Savchenko.
19. Anne Brasseur, then President of the Parliamentary Assembly,
asked Russian Duma Speaker Sergey Naryshkin for his assistance in
securing the urgent release of Ms Savchenko, underlining that “this
is an issue which will continue to poison relations between Russia
and Ukraine and put the life of a young woman at risk, unless it
is resolved rapidly”. Her successor
Pedro Agramunt also called for Nadiya Savchenko’s immediate release.
20. Liliane Maury Pasquier (Switzerland, SOC) and Theodora Bakoyannis
(Greece, EPP/CD) and Jordi Xuclà (Spain, ALDE) and Axel Fischer
(Germany, EPP/CD), respectively co-rapporteurs in the Assembly’s Monitoring
Committee in respect of the Russian Federation and Ukraine, pointed
out that Ms Savchenko, as a member of the Parliamentary Assembly,
should benefit from immunity from prosecution under the General Agreement
on Privileges and Immunities of the Council of Europe and its protocols.
The four rapporteurs reiterated the Assembly’s call for her immediate
release and urged the Russian authorities to allow her to return to
Ukraine.
21. Daniel Mitov, Chair of the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe, underlined that the case of Ms Nadiya Savchenko has been
raised on a number of occasions within the Committee of Ministers and it has already expressed its concern about Ms Savchenko’s
state of health and called on the Russian authorities to release
her without delay on humanitarian grounds.
22. In my capacity as rapporteur on this report, I made several
statements to draw the attention of the international community
to the continuing detention by the Russian Federation of Ms Nadiya
Savchenko and to request her liberation.
3. Conclusion
23. The charges against Ms Savchenko
appear to be fabricated and the trial manipulated in such a way
that a guilty verdict was a foregone conclusion.
24. The international community, including the European Parliament,
the European Union and the United States, has condemned the unfair
trial of Ms Savchenko and called for her immediate release. In accordance with
previous negotiations, the Ukrainian authorities reiterated their
readiness to carry out an exchange of prisoners in order to allow
the return of Ms Savchenko and other Ukrainian political prisoners.
Her state of health is of the utmost concern as she continues her
hunger strike.
25. Until now, the Russian authorities have rejected any appeals
for Ms Savchenko’s release. Moreover, they have prevented any Ukrainian
doctors from checking her medical condition. I believe that it is
the obligation of the Assembly to condemn the unfair and illegal
trial of Ms Savchenko by the Russian court and to call on the Russian
Federation to immediately release her. Ms Savchenko's release would
send a strong humanitarian message given her health problems, and
would help rebuild confidence in the peace process aimed at resolving
the two-year-old crisis in and around Ukraine.