1991 crackdown case defendant Golovatov sees trial as political

Mikhail Golovatov
AFP/Scanpix

“He finds (the process) quite strange. He thinks the case is political,” Ryšardas Burda told BNS on Wednesday.

Golovatov was the commander of a squad that stormed the TV Tower and the Radio and Television Committee building in Vilnius.

Prosecutors have charged the high-ranking KGB officer with treatment of persons prohibited under international law, killing, causing bodily harm to, torture or other inhuman treatment of persons protected under international humanitarian law, carrying out a prohibited military attack, and using prohibited means of warfare.

They ask the court to sentence the 69-year-old man to life imprisonment.

Based on the case file, Golovatov lives in Moscow. He is one of the few defendants in the case who has a hired defense lawyer. Most of the defendants are represented by public lawyers.

In his defense statement on Wednesday, Burda told the court, among other things, that the public prosecutor had failed to provide evidence to either directly or indirectly link the defendant’s actions to the victims’ deaths or injuries.

Fourteen civilians were killed and hundreds more were wounded when the Soviet troops stormed the TV Tower and the Radio and Television Committee building in Vilnius in the early hours of January 13, 1991

Over 60 people have been charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes in the case. Most of them are tried in absentia.

Prosecutors demand that Dmitry Yazov, the Soviet Union’s last defense minister, and some officers are imprisoned for life for their role in the crackdown.

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