MOSCOW — A Ukrainian court sentenced two
Russian men to 14 years in prison on Monday for fighting against Ukraine as
active-duty soldiers in the Russian military, a central issue in the separatist
war in southeast Ukraine.
The Russian government denies any role
in the fighting and the Russian Defense Ministry refuses to acknowledge any
ties to the two men. The two were wounded and captured on a battlefield last
summer. The government of Ukraine and those of Western nations insist that Russia is
actively supporting the pro-Russian separatists.
In the course of the trial, Ukraine
claimed to have finally captured — and put in a glass cage in the courtroom in
Kiev — two living examples of the suspected thousands of “little green men,” or
Russian soldiers fighting on the separatist side in uniforms without insignia.
As such, the pair — Capt. Yevgeny
Yerofeyev and Sgt. Aleksandr Aleksandrov — had taken on immense symbolic
importance for Ukrainians. The ranks date from their time in the Russian
military. The Russian government said both had resigned from the military
before leaving the country to fight in Ukraine.
Initially, they confessed in a video to
serving in the Russian military intelligence service, known by its abbreviation
G.R.U., and to belonging to a unit based in the Volga River town of Togliatti,
almost 500 miles southeast of Moscow. They later backpedaled in a court
hearing, saying they were soldiers with a separatist group.
Still,
their Ukrainian lawyers, one of whom was kidnapped and murdered under
mysterious circumstances during the trial, had continued to insist the two be
treated as prisoners of war rather than criminal suspects.
All the while, the Russian government
denied any ties to the men or obligation to help with their defense.
At Monday’s hearing, both were convicted
of various terrorism-related charges for taking part in a firefight that killed
a Ukrainian soldier and wounded three other Ukrainians. The two fighters were
apprehended after that battle.
Nobody disputes that the two are Russian
citizens. At issue was whether the pair, who stood impassively as defendants in
the glass cage during the two-hour reading of the verdict, were active-duty
Russian soldiers who infiltrated Ukraine in unmarked uniforms.
The conviction seemed likely to open the
door for a prisoner exchange for Lt. Nadiya Savchenko, a Ukrainian military
pilot sentenced in Russia to
22 years in prison on charges of calling in an artillery
strike that killed a journalist, also during fighting in southeastern Ukraine.
Ukrainian officials, the lawyer for Mr.
Yerofeyev, Oksana Sokolovskaya, and Russian lawyers representing Ms. Savchanko
say a trade now seems imminent.
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