Ukraine pilot faces verdict in Russian murder trial decried by Kiev

Ukrainian helicopter pilot Nadiya Savchenko is set Monday to hear the verdict in her high-profile murder trial in southern Russia, which Kiev and the West have slammed as a political sham.

Donetsk: Ukrainian helicopter pilot Nadiya Savchenko is set Monday to hear the verdict in her high-profile murder trial in southern Russia, which Kiev and the West have slammed as a political sham.

Prosecutors are demanding 23 years in jail for Savchenko`s alleged involvement in killing two Russian state TV journalists in war-torn eastern Ukraine, with few doubting that the 34-year-old combat helicopter navigator will be found guilty, and Kiev already pushing for a prisoner swap. 

Ukraine and the West see Savchenko`s case as a political show trial and insist she is the latest pawn in the Kremlin`s broader aggression against its ex-Soviet neighbour that saw Moscow seize the Crimea peninsula and fuel a separatist insurgency.

"Savchenko will be sentenced to a few dozen years, and there is no doubt about this," one of her lawyers Mark Feigin wrote on Twitter ahead of the two-day court ruling.
"A propaganda machine is at work here, absent of justice and freedom."

Savchenko -- who has become a national hero at home and been elected to parliament in absentia -- insists she was kidnapped by pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine in June 2014 and illegally smuggled over the border into Russia before being slapped with false charges. 

But authorities in Russia insist she was the "spotter" in the fatal shelling of Russian state journalists Igor Kornelyuk and Anton Voloshin, as she served in a volunteer pro-Kiev battalion fighting the insurgents and must face justice. 

Ukraine`s pro-Western President Petro Poroshenko has pledged to do "everything possible" to bring Savchenko back home and mooted a prisoner swap to free her. 

Kiev is holding two men it says were Russian soldiers serving in the east of the country, who could provide Poroshenko with a possible bargaining chip.

But Moscow is also thought to have at least 10 other Ukrainians behind bars -- including high-profile detainees like film director Oleg Sentsov -- and the Kremlin has given little hint it is ready to play ball.

Savchenko has struck a defiant figure throughout the long months of her detention, which saw her sent to a psychiatric hospital near Moscow before being transferred close to the Ukraine border for her trial in the town of Donetsk. 

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