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Ukraine pilot Savchenko defies judge in final statement Ukraine pilot Savchenko defies judge in final statement
(about 1 hour later)
A Ukrainian pilot on trial in Russia over the killing of two journalists has addressed the court and says she will continue a hunger strike she has been on for five days.A Ukrainian pilot on trial in Russia over the killing of two journalists has addressed the court and says she will continue a hunger strike she has been on for five days.
Nadia Savchenko was making her closing statement in the trial.Nadia Savchenko was making her closing statement in the trial.
She denies directing artillery fire at the Russian journalists in June 2014.She denies directing artillery fire at the Russian journalists in June 2014.
She is reported to have refused all food and drink since 3 March when the hearing was adjourned before she could make her a final statement. She is reported to have refused all food and drink since 3 March when the hearing was adjourned before she could make her final statement.
During her appearance on Wednesday, she showed the judge her middle finger as a sign she rejects the court's legitimacy. At one point in her appearance on Wednesday, she leapt onto the bench inside the cage and showed the judges her middle finger, the BBC's Sarah Rainsford reports from the court in Donetsk in southern Russia, where the trial is being held.
Her lawyer says sentencing is due later this month. The EU and US have both called for her immediate release. She mocked the judges in Ukrainian, saying they were proving that Russians were "fascists".
In a statement, US Vice President Joe Biden described Ms Savchenko as having been "unjustly imprisoned in Russia since 2014 - detained and facing trial on trumped-up charges". A translator read out her formal, final statement in which she proclaims her innocence and describes her trial as a "farce".
'Fighting spirit' The EU and US have both called for her immediate release.
A verdict in the case is due on or around 21 March but her lawyers have said she will not survive that long unless she is force-fed.
Access denied
She was captured in 2014 at the height of the fighting between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels.She was captured in 2014 at the height of the fighting between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels.
The 34-year-old insists the whole case against her is politically motivated, and she has become a symbol of Ukraine's resistance against Russia.The 34-year-old insists the whole case against her is politically motivated, and she has become a symbol of Ukraine's resistance against Russia.
She says she was kidnapped by rebel fighters at least an hour before the attack in which the two Russian TV journalists were killed.She says she was kidnapped by rebel fighters at least an hour before the attack in which the two Russian TV journalists were killed.
A team of "the best Ukrainian doctors" are due to examine her on Wednesday amid concerns for her health, according to a Ukrainian lawmaker. Ukrainian consuls in the Russian region of Rostov say judges in the case are refusing to issue any more permits to visit Ms Savchenko in prison.
Ms Savchenko called her hunger strike to protest at what she has described as her "illegal imprisonment" in Russia and "farce" of a murder trial, reports the BBC's Sarah Rainsford from Donetsk in southern Russia where the trial is being held. Her relatives have also used up all their visiting permits, meaning a group of Ukrainian doctors en route from Kiev to visit her will also not be given access.
Her lawyers have said that in the event of a guilty verdict she should be returned to Ukraine, saying that if she remains in Russia she will face either force-feeding or death.
Whilst the defendant is weak, a Ukrainian diplomat who visited her on Tuesday told the BBC that she was still in "fighting spirit".
The EU has expressed concern about Ms Savchenko's wellbeing, and Nobel prize-winner Svitlana Aleksievich is among more than 4,300 signatories to an open letter urging European leaders to act to secure her freedom.The EU has expressed concern about Ms Savchenko's wellbeing, and Nobel prize-winner Svitlana Aleksievich is among more than 4,300 signatories to an open letter urging European leaders to act to secure her freedom.
Relations between Russia and Ukraine - along with its Western allies - have deteriorated following Moscow's annexation of the Crimea peninsula in 2014 and its support for pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine.Relations between Russia and Ukraine - along with its Western allies - have deteriorated following Moscow's annexation of the Crimea peninsula in 2014 and its support for pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine.