Ukrainian Director Sentenced to 20 Years in Labor Camp in Show Trial

Oleg Sentsov was sentenced in what some say was a show trial.

In court Sentsov, who has young children, has calmly dismissed the case against him as politically ordered.

“I won’t ask anything from you,” Sentsov told the judge in his closing statement, Radio Free Europe reported. “Everyone understands everything. A court of occupiers cannot be just by definition.”

Russian authorities have shown themselves unwilling to brook little criticism of Crimea’s annexation—within days of the peninsula’s seizure, community leaders demonstrating against it there began to be kidnapped by masked men.

Now prosecutors are investigating roughly a dozen cases against Ukrainian citizens; the most widely known involves Nadezhda Savchenko, Ukraine’s first female military pilot, who the Ukrainian government considers is being held hostage by Russia.

Even in a country familiar with political trials, the 20-year sentence handed to Sentsov and the 10 years to his co-defendant, Kolchenko, are exceptionally harsh. Both men will serve their time in maximum security labor camps.

Before being led away, the two men sang the Ukrainian national anthem. In his closing speech, Sentsov quoted the Russian novelist Mikhail Bulgakov, who suffered during the years of Stalin’s terror.

“Cowardice is the main and the worst sin on Earth. A big betrayal sometimes begins with a small act of cowardice,” he said. “Like when they put a bag over your head and beat you and after half an hour you are ready to renounce all your convictions.

"I don’t know what your convictions are worth if you aren’t ready to suffer for them.”