British fighter files appeal against death sentence

Fight Censorship, Share This Post!

Aiden Aslin’s cassation complaint follows similar moves by two other foreigners convicted by a DPR court 

The defense of Aiden Aslin, a British citizen who had been fighting for the Ukrainian Armed Forces and sentenced to death by a Donetsk court on June 9, has appealed the conviction, his lawyer, Pavel Kosovan, told TASS on Monday.

Kosovan revealed that the defense is contesting two counts of the verdict – ‘commission of crimes by a group of persons’ and ‘forcible seizure of power or violent retention of power’ – and to dismiss the case in this part “due to the absence of corpus delicti in the actions of the defendant.”

Aslin was found guilty on three counts – the third was ‘mercenarism.’ The Donetsk People’s Republic’s Criminal Code provides for punishment under this article for a period of up to seven years.

Aslin is the last of three foreign fighters facing death sentences in the DPR to appeal the decision. Late last month, the lawyer of his compatriot, Shaun Pinner, asked the court to replace the death sentence with life imprisonment. The court said at the time that the cassation would be considered within two months of the date the case was sent to the Supreme Court.

Read more

British citizens Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner, and Moroccan citizen Saadun Ibrahim attend a court hearing in Donetsk, Donetsk People's Republic. © Sputnik / Konstantin Mihalchevskiy
British men who fought for Ukraine sentenced to death

Last Friday, the defense for Moroccan Saadun Brahim also said it had filed a complaint with the court. 

The court confirmed the receipt of all three complaints.

The three fighters were captured in or near Mariupol, a port city that the DPR claims as part of its sovereign territory, and which saw weeks of intense fighting and eventually a blockade of thousands of Ukrainian troops at a steel plant. They later surrendered to Russian and DPR forces. 

London has demanded that its citizens be treated as prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions. However, Britain is not formally at war with the DPR.

The authorities in the DPR have said they consider the men to be mercenaries, who are not granted the same privileges as regular combatants under international law.


Fight Censorship, Share This Post!

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.