From
‘hero’ to terrorist: Savchenko arrested in Ukrainian parliament
for plotting terrorist attack
RT,
21
March, 2018
Ukrainian
MP Nadezhda Savchenko, once glorified as a Ukrainian “hero”
persecuted by Moscow, has been detained again – this time by her
fellow countrymen. The former pilot is now suspected of plotting a
coup and a terrorist attack.
Savchenko
was arrested by Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) officers right in
the building of the Verkhovnaya Rada (the Ukrainian parliament) on
Thursday. Moments before that, the MPs stripped Savchenko of her
legal immunity that allows Ukrainian MPs to enjoy protection from
prosecution and agreed to her arrest.
The
lawmakers were shown a video obtained by the Ukrainian Prosecutor
General’s Office that allegedly shows Savchenko discussing details
of a coup plot with her accomplices. According to the video, the MP
even planned to assassinate Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko. She
is suspected of plotting a terrorist attack, planning to kill members
of parliament, government, and the president, and organizing a coup.
Savchenko’s
sister, Vera, said she expects Ukraine’s international “partners”
and particularly the US to react to her sister’s arrest. “I would
like to look at the reaction of those people, who fought for her
[Nadezhda Savchenko], of the US representatives… I would like to
see the reaction of these people to the actions of our corrupt
authorities,” she told journalists, adding that the US strongly
warned against corruption in Ukraine, yet nothing was done.
Savchenko
first rose to prominence both in Ukraine and in the West after she
was arrested in Russia on charges of being an accessory to the murder
of two Russian journalists who were killed by mortar shelling while
reporting on the Ukrainian conflict. Russian law enforcement said she
served as a target spotter for the mortar crew and deliberately had
them target non-combatants.
Following
her arrest in Russia, Savchenko was immediately declared a hero of
Ukraine. She was elected as an MP in absentia, appointed a member of
Ukraine’s delegation to PACE and made into a symbol of struggle
against Russia at a time when she was tried and actually sentenced to
22 years in prison for the crime. The Western media also portrayed
her as a heroic figure persecuted by Moscow.
Savchenko
was pardoned by Russian President Vladimir Putin and returned to
Ukraine in May 2016.
But
things changed for the former hero after she become a fierce critic
of President Petro Poroshenko, talked about running for president,
and acted on her own in an effort to make a deal with self-proclaimed
independent republics in the East. She then quickly alienated many
Ukrainian politicians.
Surrealism
and grenades
On
Thursday, Savchenko came to the hearing of her case in the parliament
with two grenades. She admitted that she helped smuggle weapons from
Donbass and said that a coup is the “the most humane way of
changing the power.” She claimed that “only a lazy person now
does not” speak or think about “taking down that government” or
“blowing up” the president’s administration or the parliament.
Yet, Savchenko called her actions “surrealism and political
provocation,” and she didn’t actually intend to carry out the
plan.
Savchenko’s
confrontation with authorities snowballed over the last week. The
prosecutors initially wanted to question Savchenko over alleged links
to a man named Vladimir Ruban, who was earlier arrested while trying
to smuggle a large cache of weapons from the rebel-controlled part of
eastern Ukraine into territory that remains under Kiev’s control.
The Ukrainian authorities claim that Ruban was also planning an armed
coup in Kiev.
Ukrainian
Prosecutor General Yury Lutsenko requested that the Verkhovna Rada
strip Savchenko of legal immunity last week after she failed to show
up for a scheduled questioning. Earlier, the MP accused Lutsenko of
covering up his involvement in the deadly 2014 Maidan shooting, which
was one of the factors that eventually prompted the Maidan coup. She
also accused several Ukrainian MPs of leading the snipers to the
Hotel Ukraine, from which shots were later fired at people on the
streets, thus implying that the 2014 mass killings might in fact have
been initiated by the protester side.
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