Ukraine: Selective justice in the Tymoshenko trial

by TOMI HAXHI

On October 11, 2011, former Ukrainian Prime Minister, Yulia Tymoshenko, was found guilty of abuse of office and sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment. The Kiev court ruled against Tymoshenko’s involvement in a controversial two-year old gas deal with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

The news of Tymoshenko’s criminal trial and subsequent sentence made a considerable impression on an international scale; Ukraine now faces significant pressure from the European Union (EU) and several other international organisations, politicians, and diplomats to release the former prime minister.

Yulia Tymoshenko rose to global prominence during the 2004 Orange Revolution, rallying against the corruption present in post-Soviet Ukraine. Following the overthrow of Viktor Yanukovych, Tymoshenko was appointed the first female Prime Minister of Ukraine and was later re-elected. Prior to her political career, Tymoshenko led a decidedly successful career in the gas industry.

Since her unsuccessful bid for president in 2010, 12 criminal cases have been opened against Tymoshenko and several Ukrainian officials affiliated with her under the government of former Prime Minister and current President, Viktor Yanukovych. Of these 12 cases, the courts most actively pursued the claims against Tymoshenko’s ‘abuse of office’. Old proceedings against Unified Energy Systems of Ukraine were reopened in an effort to exclude Tymoshenko and her former government from Ukraine’s political front. Accused of exceeding her authority as prime minister by signing a 2009 gas deal with Russia, Tymoshenko’s trial began on June 24, 2011.

In his ruling, Judge Rodion Kireyev sentenced the opposition leader to seven years in jail, a ban from political participation during her period of imprisonment, and a fine of approximately $188 million, lost by the state gas company as a result of the Ukraine-Russia gas deal.

The details of the case remain questionable at best. Article 365 of the Ukrainian criminal code, under which Tymoshenko was prosecuted, dates back to the Stalinist period of the 1930s. Whereas such cases are handled as political cases throughout the EU, the Kiev court handled Tymoshenko’s trial as a criminal case. Moreover, prosecutor Lilya Frolova admitted that several documents in the investigation were dated April 31, a non-existent date.

Unable to participate in the coming 2012 parliamentary and 2015 presidential elections, Tymoshenko remains defiantly positive. “I will continue my fight for Ukraine, for its European future,” she told reporters shortly before her sentencing on October 11, 2011.

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(Thanks to Feroz Mehdi)