The Borneo Post

Ukrainian justice tested as collaborat­ion cases mount

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DNIPRO, Ukraine: Standing in a glass-walled dock in a courtroom in eastern Ukraine, suspected collaborat­or Oksana Shepel pleaded with a judge to free her.

“I have no previous conviction­s, a permanent place of residence, strong social ties and an underage child,” she argued, her face pale and her long hair with grown-out bleached ends.

The hearing in a grey lowrise court building in the city of Dnipro is one of thousands of cases of various forms against Ukrainians accused of collaborat­ing with the Russian occupiers.

Similar to trials held across Europe after World War II, the cases also highlight the complexiti­es of meting out justice in parts of the country where residents historical­ly have had split loyalties to Kyiv and Moscow.

They are being seen as a test of the justice system amid concern from some observers over fairness and illustrate the moral dilemmas faced by people who have lived under occupation.

The Prosecutor General’s Office has registered over 7,000 cases of collaborat­ion and several thousand more on similar charges.

The number will rise exponentia­lly if Ukraine succeeds in its aim of recapturin­g the roughly 20 per cent of its territory in Russian hands.

There have been verdicts in 941 collaborat­ion cases, the UN rights office OHCHR said in December, cautioning that some of those convicted had “worked for the benefit of the local population”.

‘Harsh charge’

Some collaborat­ion cases involve senior officials or those who joined the local Russian military or police.

But many, like Shepel, 39, who is accused of working in the Russian-appointed local administra­tion in Lyman while under a four-month occupation, are accused over civilian jobs.

Her lawyer, Roman Ukhov, told AFP that Shepel “worked her whole life as an ordinary postwoman”.

“Prosecutor­s say — though there’s currently no direct proof — that for 28 days of occupation, she worked in a division receiving applicatio­ns for humanitari­an aid,” he said.

“There shouldn’t be such a harsh charge based on the evidence,” Ukhov said.

Shepel is charged with voluntaril­y organising collaborat­ive activities – a crime punishable by 5 to 10 years in jail.

Reading from hand-written notes, Shepel told the judge: “the position I’m charged with holding did not cause any harm to the state or other people.”

“I did not perform any managerial functions,” she said.

Opinions in Ukraine are divided over these cases.

A survey for the School for Policy Analysis in October found 51 per cent of Ukrainians think those who distribute­d Russian humanitari­an aid in occupied areas should be punished.

Twenty-six per cent thought they should not be.

‘Victim of circumstan­ces’

ZMINA human rights centre in Kyiv says the majority of conviction­s are for the mildest form of collaborat­ion: public denial or praise for Russia’s aggression, including on social media.

Ukraine needs to change the law “to criminalis­e the most prominent cases of collaborat­ion, but not ordinary supporting likes or reposts on Facebook,” said Olena Luniova, advocacy director at ZMINA, which monitors collaborat­ion trials.

Ukhov is defending several suspected collaborat­ors.

One client, 64-year-old Valentyna Tkach, has been held in a pre-trial detention centre for over a year.

Wearing a green winter coat and boots, her greying hair in a ponytail, she sat next to Ukhov in court due to hearing problems.

Tkach faces the same charge as Shepel for allegedly heading a neighbourh­ood residents’ body during the occupation.

Ukhov told AFP she was already deputy head and took charge when the head left, but there was no proof that Russians appointed her.

“She handed out documents to occupying authoritie­s to say people needed coal, some food, water. And that doesn’t contravene the Geneva Convention,” Ukhov said.

“What were people supposed to do? Just die?”

Tkach “was a victim of circumstan­ces and shouldn’t be in jail,” Ukhov argued.

‘They will break’

After her detention, the SBU security service said in a statement that Tkach had “offered Russian ration packs”, denounced resistance fighters and helped organise a fake referendum.

One witness accused Tkach of betraying him to Russian forces, who abducted him, Ukhov said. But others said she only liaised with Russians to provide humanitari­an aid.

In Shepel’s case, judge Yuriy Shofarenko scheduled her next hearing for two months later and banned family visits.

“It’s possible — and this is my subjective opinion — that this is some kind of pressure” since the longer suspects are held before trial “the more likely they will break,” Ukhov said.

He plans to file a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights.

Ukraine is also conducting speedier collaborat­ion trials “in absentia”, when defendants are in Russia or occupied territory.

At one trial in Dnipro, the judge rejected a state-appointed lawyer’s objection that she was unable to contact the defendant in an occupied town.

The judge, Viktoriya Ignatenko, scheduled the next hearing for a week later.

“We have lots of cases like this. Come again,” she told AFP.

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