The lawyer of Karpyuk and Klykh spoke about how Savchenko broke through the Russian border at night
Russian lawyer Ilya Novikov “confronted” Radio Liberty journalist Aider Muzhdabaev, Ukrainian terrorist Gennady Afanasyev, released in a hostage exchange, and nationalist activist Yuri Gudimenko for their “slowness” in supporting Ukrainian nationalists Klykh and Karpyuk, who are on trial in the Russian Federation for participating in fighting in Chechnya on the side of the local separatists.
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Novikov made this remark on his own page on the social network.
“While you were sleeping patriotically at night, Savchenko was first stopped in the car for three hours on the Minsk-Moscow highway, and in the end was not allowed into the Russian Federation, then she decided to return to Minsk and fly by plane. And in the interval we had the selection of documents from her and the Belarusian driver, a window of two languid hours with no communication at all, waiting for the border colonel who had gone to the cordon to resolve the issue from Smolensk itself. Return to Minsk, flight to Moscow, another sudden and atypical cordon at Sheremetyevo on a flight where there have never been cordons. And only at 8 am the arrival hall and taxi,” the lawyer wrote.
Ilya Novikov.
Ilya Novikov also expressed gratitude to Nadezhda Savchenko for her attention to the case of Karpyuk and Klykh.
“Thank you to Nadezhda Savchenko, because thanks to her, today there is sharply more attention to the case of Karpyuk and Klykh. It is impossible to dissuade your deputy Savchenko from going, nor to pretend that she did not tell me about this in advance. Just help get there and keep your fingers crossed. Because if it had actually been closed at any point along the way, what would the Ukrainians have done with the Russian lawyer who didn’t stop it? Don’t say that you would say thank you, as you are now joking. They would eat it with shit and cibul,” he noted.
The lawyer also thanked ex-Prime Minister Aoseniy Yatsenyuk “for reacting and fitting in.”
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.