Ukrainian ex-PM to remain in custody
FORMER Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko suffered a fresh setback in her abuse of power trial when a higher court refused to hear her appeal against police detention yesterday.
The charismatic Tymoshenko narrowly lost to President Viktor Yanukovich in an election for president in February 2010 and has been at daggers drawn with him since.
She was sent for trial at the end of June on a charge of abuse of power over a gas deal signed with Russia in 2009 when she was prime minister, which the Yanukovich leadership says was against the national interest and left the country saddled with high prices for Russian gas.
She denies this and says her trial is part of a political vendetta by Yanukovich aimed at neutralizing her as a force in Ukrainian politics ahead of an October 2012 parliamentary election.
The trial of Tymoshenko, 50, a fiery orator who enjoys iconic status among her followers, has been the stage for weeks of fractious exchanges between her and the trial judge in which she has accused him of being a "puppet" of Yanukovich.
Last Friday, the trial judge ordered her to be detained in police custody for contempt of court, sparking fresh protests among the hundreds of her followers who rally daily on the street in front of the central Kiev court. The United States and European Union member states have called on the authorities to release Tymoshenko from police custody during the trial.
Her lawyers went to an appeals court to ask it to throw out the detention decision on the grounds it was unlawful.
"The appeals court took the decision to refuse to consider the appeal," said Judge Olga Yesimova yesterday.
Tymoshenko's lawyer Yuri Sukhov called the decision "a strange one."
"Lawyers don't appear to have the right to dispute an arrest. Such is democracy in Ukraine," he said.
The charismatic Tymoshenko narrowly lost to President Viktor Yanukovich in an election for president in February 2010 and has been at daggers drawn with him since.
She was sent for trial at the end of June on a charge of abuse of power over a gas deal signed with Russia in 2009 when she was prime minister, which the Yanukovich leadership says was against the national interest and left the country saddled with high prices for Russian gas.
She denies this and says her trial is part of a political vendetta by Yanukovich aimed at neutralizing her as a force in Ukrainian politics ahead of an October 2012 parliamentary election.
The trial of Tymoshenko, 50, a fiery orator who enjoys iconic status among her followers, has been the stage for weeks of fractious exchanges between her and the trial judge in which she has accused him of being a "puppet" of Yanukovich.
Last Friday, the trial judge ordered her to be detained in police custody for contempt of court, sparking fresh protests among the hundreds of her followers who rally daily on the street in front of the central Kiev court. The United States and European Union member states have called on the authorities to release Tymoshenko from police custody during the trial.
Her lawyers went to an appeals court to ask it to throw out the detention decision on the grounds it was unlawful.
"The appeals court took the decision to refuse to consider the appeal," said Judge Olga Yesimova yesterday.
Tymoshenko's lawyer Yuri Sukhov called the decision "a strange one."
"Lawyers don't appear to have the right to dispute an arrest. Such is democracy in Ukraine," he said.
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