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Estonia to seek solution to pilots' problem in Tajikistan jointly with Russia, EU

Other News Materials 9 November 2011 11:04 (UTC +04:00)
Estonia together with Russia and the European Union will continue the search for an acceptable solution to the case of Russian airline pilots, Estonian citizen Alexei Rudenko and Russian citizen Vladimir Sadovnichy, the Estonian Foreign Ministry said
Estonia to seek solution to pilots' problem in Tajikistan jointly with Russia, EU

Estonia together with Russia and the European Union will continue the search for an acceptable solution to the case of Russian airline pilots, Estonian citizen Alexei Rudenko and Russian citizen Vladimir Sadovnichy, the Estonian Foreign Ministry said, Itar-Tass reported.

"The motives of the Tajik court are unclear, and further custody of the Estonian citizen is unfounded," the ministry said. "There is a joint search for a solution, and we will involve our partners in the EU and Russia in it if necessary."

Anyway, Estonia will insist on the extradition of its citizen. "Estonian citizens serving time in prisons of third countries have a possibility to be transferred to Estonia in the case of a bilateral agreement to that effect," the ministry said.

The two pilots of a Russian airline registered on the Virgin Islands were seized by Tajik security service officers in March 2011 as soon as their Antonov An-72 jets touched down in the Kurgan-Tyube airport. The bill of indictment said that the pilots breached the rules of international flights and illegally crossed the border of Tajikistan. The prosecutor demanded 13 years in custody for each. The trial started on October 13.

The lawyer said that the pilots had a preliminary permit to fly across the Tajik border but the Tajik authorities suddenly denied them the entry when the planes were already in the air.

Earlier both pilots worked in Afghanistan. Their Afghan contract ended on March 10, 2011.

The Kurgan-Tyube trial triggered a broad public response. Representatives of the Russian and Estonian embassies and Russian journalists attended the trial.

The Kurgan-Tyube City Court sentenced Vladimir Sadovnichy of Russia and Alexei Rudenko of Estonia to 8.5 years in a maximum-security penitentiary for the breach of Tajikistan's air space and contraband. The pilots were apprehended in March 2011. They pleaded not guilty.

The State Duma has called 'dubious and unjust' the guilty verdict of a Tajik court on two pilots of the Russian Rolkan Investments Ltd airline and urged an appeal for acquittal.

The Russian parliamentarians said that the sentence was too severe. "I am confident that Russia should use every chance for a review of the unfoundedly severe sentence within the framework of Tajik laws," Chairman of the State Duma International Affairs Committee Konstantin Kosachyov said.

"The guilty verdict is unjust, and the crime itself is in question," First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Civil, Criminal and Arbitration Law and Practice Committee Andrei Nazarov said. "We kept hoping for an acquittal till the very end."

It is still necessary to analyze the case fully but Russia should start up the appeal mechanism right now, he said. "I hope the pilots will be acquitted in the end," he said.

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