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Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors
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WATCH: Moscow Court Upholds Extending Pretrial Detention Of Ukrainian Sailors

Live Blog: A New Government In Ukraine (Archive Sept. 3, 2018-Aug. 16, 2019)

-- EDITOR'S NOTE: We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog as of August 17, 2019. You can find it here.

-- A court in Moscow has upheld a lower court's decision to extend pretrial detention for six of the 24 Ukrainian sailors detained by Russian forces along with their three naval vessels in November near the Kerch Strait, which links the Black Sea and Sea of Azov.

-- The U.S. special peace envoy to Ukraine, Kurt Volker, says Russian propaganda is making it a challenge to solve the conflict in the east of the country.

-- Two more executives of DTEK, Ukraine's largest private power and coal producer, have been charged in a criminal case on August 14 involving an alleged conspiracy to fix electricity prices with the state energy regulator, Interfax reported.

-- A Ukrainian deputy minister and his aide have been detained after allegedly taking a bribe worth $480,000, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau said on Facebook.

*Time stamps on the blog refer to local time in Ukraine

12:04 11.9.2018

Sentsov Losing Hope For 'Happy Ending' To Russian Prison Ordeal

By RFE/RL

Jailed Crimean film director Oleh Sentsov says that his "limbs are going numb" nearly four months into a hunger strike and that he no longer believes his ordeal in a Russian prison will have a "happy ending," his cousin says.

"There's a fog in my head. Everything is spinning, my body, my head, and my limbs are going numb," Natalya Kaplan -- in a Facebook post on September 11 -- quoted Sentsov as saying in a letter he sent her from prison.

"I have not given up, in any case. It's just that I don't believe in a happy ending to this whole story," she quoted him as saying.

Sentsov, a Crimean native who opposed Russia's 2014 takeover of the Ukrainian peninsula, is serving a 20-year prison term after being convicted of terrorism in a trial that he, human rights groups, and Western governments contend was politically motivated.

Imprisoned in the far northern Yamalo-Nenets region of Russia, Sentsov started a hunger strike on May 14, demanding that Russia release 64 fellow Ukrainians he considers political prisoners.

"My condition is about the same: stably lousy," he wrote, according to Kaplan. "To all the old special effects, hypoxia -- a shortage of oxygen in the organs, mainly the heart and brain -- has been added.... My circulatory system is not handling the job of supplying oxygen to the organism."

"I no longer believe that I will soon walk free and that we will all live happily in Kyiv,” he wrote.

The plight of Sentsov, 42, has drawn expressions of support from artists around the world and calls from Western governments for his release.

In August, the Kremlin rejected a plea by Sentsov’s mother for a pardon from Russian President Vladimir Putin, and nothing has come of frequent talk of a potential prisoner exchange that would send him home to Ukraine.

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