Russian pilot faces trial in US despite Moscow?s protests
Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko is facing trial on Monday in New York for alleged international drug trafficking. He was arrested by US officials last year and has been kept in jail ever since.
Moscow has accused the US of violating laws and is demanding his immediate release.
Alleged tons of cocaine confiscated, a pilot snatched and taken to a foreign prison, a wrong fax number? this is the case of Konstantin Yaroshenko.
A Russian pilot in his 40s, he was scooped up by US officials in Liberia last year, taken to a Manhattan jail, and - along with four other suspects - charged with international drug trafficking.
"For a long time, he did not even know where he was - when he was brought to the US, he was put in solitary confinement, and he did not even know he was in the United States," said Yaroshenko`s wife, Victoria.
She believes her husband was kidnapped by American agents, while America says Yaroshenko was smuggling drugs to South America, Africa and Europe, mostly from Venezuela and Liberia.
The pilot has complained he was beaten and tortured following his arrest.
"They tried to pick fights with him, provoking him constantly," she said. "Kostya tried to stay away from all that?. He asked them, ?Why are you treating me like this?? I did not do anything to you, and I have not been found guilty."
Victoria believes the case against her husband was fabricated by the US.
"If he breached laws, take him to Russia to be dealt with?. He has to be deported to Russia and dealt with by Russian officials," she added. "Why the US is involved in this is unclear. He has never been to the US in his entire life. He never even had a US visa, and was in a third country upon his arrest."
When Konstantin Yaroshenko was arrested, Russian officials were not duly notified, a breach, Moscow says, of international law.
"We have apologized to Russia," said PJ Crowley, US Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs.
"We pressed the wrong button on the fax machine, to be brutally honest," notifying Romania instead of Russia.
To observers, this seemed to be a joke - on top of a series of questionable details in this case.
"The idea that there is a bank of buttons, that they push? I guess if they push the next one, it would have gone to Rwanda, which is next in the alphabetical list. So, that sounds like a very strange story," said RT contributor Wayne Madsen.
Yaroshenko`s case is often compared with that of Viktor Bout - similarly snatched up by the US in Thailand and currently on trial in America for arms trafficking. Some see a tendency here.
"If they can`t use Interpol, they can`t use picking up the phone to Russia and trying to talk about this, just going out and kidnapping people - I think this is part of a carryover from the Bush-Cheney administration," said Madsen.
The defense team has long labeled the case a provocation, and unsuccessfully called for its dismissal.
The prosecution, meanwhile, has been fighting to limit the scope of issues that can be addressed during the hearings.
They want to exclude questions regarding the legality of trying Yaroshenko in a US court, alleged violations in the investigation leading up to his arrest, and official conduct during and after the pilot`s arrest - essentially, all the main arguments of the defense.
After nearly ten months, Yaroshenko`s trial date is finally here. A jury is deciding his destiny. If found guilty, he may face ten years to life behind bars.
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