KIEV — Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko on Tuesday was found guilty of abuse of office and sentenced to seven years in jail, in a trial widely condemned in the West as politically motivated.
Judge Rodion Kireyev also barred Tymoshenko, now the country’s top opposition leader, from occupying government posts for three years after the completion of her prison term and fined her $190 million in damages to the state.
Tymoshenko remained calm, but didn’t wait for Judge Kireyev to finish reading the lengthy ruling, standing up from her seat and addressing reporters in the courtroom as he spoke.
She compared her verdict, which she claimed was written by her longtime foe, President Viktor Yanukovych, to the horrific purges by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
“The year 1937 has returned to Ukraine with this verdict and all the repression of citizens,” she said, adding that she would contest the ruling. “As for me, be sure that I will not stop my fight even for a minute. I will always be with you as long as it is necessary.”
“Nobody, not Yanukovych, not Kireyev, can humiliate my honest name. I have worked and will continue to work for Ukraine’s sake,” Tymoshenko told reporters earlier.
As Judge Kireyev was leaving the courtroom, Tymoshenko’s husband, Oleksandr, yelled out that his time would also come for a similar verdict. One Tymoshenko supporter shouted “Shame!”
Tymoshenko was found guilty of exceeding her authority during the signing of a natural gas import contract with Russia in 2009. The court ruled that she was not authorized to order the contract signed and that the price she agreed to was too high, causing losses to the state budget.
The European Union was quick to condemn the verdict as politically motivated and urged the Ukrainian authorities to ensure a transparent and fair appeals process for Tymoshenko.
A failure to do so would have “profound implications” for Ukraine-EU relations and could jeopardize the conclusion of a landmark association agreement, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said in a statement.
Tymoshenko, 50, was the driving force behind the 2004 Orange Revolution, which overturned Mr. Yanukovych’s fraud-tainted election victory then.
Mr. Yanukovych staged a comeback, narrowly defeating Tymoshenko in a 2010 presidential vote amid public disenchantment with economic hardships and constant bickering among those who had ousted Mr. Yanukovych.
Tymoshenko already has spent more than two months in jail after Judge Kireyev ordered her arrested for contempt of court. Tymoshenko also had spent several weeks in prison in 2001 on charges of document forgery and tax evasion, but the charges were later dropped.
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