-
Messi sparkles on return as Somali referee says World Cup dream over
-
Iran, US trade blows as Middle East peace deal draws no nearer
-
Salt: integral ingredient of sumo stars' art
-
Staal shines as Carolina beat Vegas 5-3 to level Stanley Cup Final
-
Messi scores on injury return as Argentina beat Iceland in World Cup warm-up
-
Art, maths and killing: Ukraine drone chief's formula to stop Russia
-
Tech leads Asia losses, oil rises as rollercoaster week rumbles on
-
Messi set to return as Somali referee says World Cup dream over
-
Former Wallabies skipper Wright signs for Welsh club Ospreys
-
Pope to bless Barcelona's Sagrada Familia, world's tallest church
-
Emotional World Cup return to Mexico for South Africa coach Broos
-
Bill Gates faces questioning in US Congress over Epstein ties
-
'The Donald of Dubai': property tycoon seeks to become data king
-
PGA Tour to co-sanction Australian Open in global push
-
Elon Musk, after DOGE and politics, bets on SpaceX IPO
-
Saudis in World Cup spotlight after $2bn spending spree
-
Mexico doubles down on security before 2026 World Cup
-
US must not be 'too honest' at World Cup, says Roldan
-
Italian astronaut to pilot Artemis III mission
-
North Korea says Xi's visit produced 'far-reaching blueprint' for ties
-
Benfica say farewell to Mourinho as Real Madrid return nears
-
Protesters torch buildings and vehicles, block roads over Belfast stabbing
-
US strikes Iran after Apache helicopter downing
-
Threats to US lawmakers spiked after Meta eased moderation: watchdog
-
Nick Reiner seeks trust fund money for parent murder defense
-
Spain, France qualify for 2027 Women's World Cup as England wait
-
Protesters torch building and vehicles, block roads over Belfast stabbing
-
A woman in charge of the UN? Candidates feel it's about time
-
US tech shares resume sell-off while oil prices retreat
-
Protesters block road to Mexican World Cup stadium
-
White House World Cup chief defends visa ban for Somali referee, Iranians
-
Serena back in the groove on triumphant return to tennis
-
'It doesn't matter': US star Reyna looks past World Cup scandal
-
Somali referee says World Cup 'dream' ruined
-
Knicks ready to 'throw the first punch' in NBA Finals
-
'Beaten to death': the grim toll of Ecuador's security crackdown
-
Anthropic opens most powerful AI model to public with safeguards
-
Serena Williams makes winning return in Queen's Club doubles
-
Trump vows response after Iran shoots down US helicopter
-
Real Madrid's 150 mn euros bid for Atletico's Alvarez rejected
-
Spurs handling physicality of Knicks and New York hostility
-
Peru election chief tells AFP count could take two weeks
-
Stokes considering England captaincy future after nightclub incident
-
Atalanta sack coach Palladino with Sarri set to arrive
-
Italian Luca Parmitano to be first European to join an Artemis mission: NASA
-
One killed as Kenyan protests at US Ebola centre turn violent
-
Somali government deeply regrets axing of referee from World Cup
-
Scotland First Minister vows to help fans refused entry for World Cup in US
-
Stocks slump as US tech rebound falters, oil dips below $90
-
Somalia backs referee after he is denied entry to US
Savchenko: Ukraine's 'symbol of defiance' to Russia
Ukrainian pilot Nadiya Savchenko, freed by Russia in a prisoner exchange on Wednesday, has been condemned by Moscow as a murderer but was rapturously received as a national hero back home.
The 35-year-old army helicopter navigator was sentenced to 22 years in March over the killing of two Russian journalists in the separatist conflict in east Ukraine.
After President Vladimir Putin pardoned her, citing the wishes of the journalists' relatives, she was secretly flown in to Kiev on a government plane.
The move came as part of a swap with two alleged Russian soldiers convicted of fighting alongside separatists in the east.
Barefoot and wearing a white T-shirt with the Ukrainian trident symbol, she declared to crowds welcoming her: "I'm ready once again to lay down my life for Ukraine on the battlefield."
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko hailed her as a "symbol of pride and defiance, just like Ukraine itself" and decorated her with the Hero of Ukraine medal.
The cropped-haired Iraq War veteran has always insisted on her innocence, calling her trial a mockery of justice.
She defiantly gave her judge a one-finger salute and refused to appeal, saying she has no faith in Russian courts.
In April she staged a hunger strike in protest against her sentence, refusing all food and liquids until persuaded to stop by Poroshenko.
Kiev and its Western allies expressed outrage, calling Savchenko a victim of a Kremlin power game and urging her release.
Both the European Union and the United States back Savchenko's account that she was abducted by pro-Moscow eastern Ukrainian separatists, smuggled to Russia and then slapped with false charges.
The Belarussian Nobel Prize winning writer Svetlana Alexievich described her as the "Ukrainian Joan of Arc," while The Economist magazine called Savchenko "a modern martyr".
But Moscow argues she was the "spotter" who helped Ukrainian forces target a deadly mortar strike at the Russian journalists.
"When they accuse me of killing the Russian journalists -- I would not do it out of principle," she told a Moscow television reporter in 2014.
"I would never open fire on an unarmed person."
- 'The smell of gunpowder' -
Savchenko was born in Kiev when Ukraine was still part of the Soviet Union and went to a Ukrainian-speaking school.
She joined the Ukrainian army and soon became the only female combat soldier among the 1,690 people Kiev sent to support the US-led military campaign in Iraq.
Savchenko described it as her first step to becoming a fighter pilot.
"I believe you can only become an officer after enlisting and taking part in live combat, getting the smell of gunpowder," she told Ukrainian television in Iraq in 2005.
Savchenko then mounted a successful campaign to become one of the few women accepted to Ukraine's highly-selective Air Force University.
She graduated in 2009 and was soon posted to an aviation regiment. But her primary duty involved navigating military helicopters -- not piloting the fighter jets she had wished to fly.
The separatist revolt that broke out in the east two months after the February 2014 ouster of Kiev's Moscow-backed leaders prompted Savchenko to take what she describes as a "vacation" and join the Aidar volunteer battalion.
Aidar's fighters have been branded as "fascists" by Russia and condemned for resorting to the torture of captives and other abuses by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
- 'This was a kidnapping' -
What happened next is a matter of dispute.
The June 17 deaths of two Russian journalists in shelling came after Savchenko had been in the immediate vicinity.
Savchenko says she had rushed to the scene because the insurgents had just hit "two armoured personnel carriers and a tank, and I went to see if anyone was wounded."
She told Russian television in July 2014 that she was then immediately "ambushed" by the insurgents.
"This really was a kidnapping," she said.
Her lawyers pointed to Savchenko's mobile phone billing records that support her account that she was taken to the region's central city of Lugansk at least an hour before the Russians were killed.
But prosecutors insisted that Savchenko was detained later after she had voluntarily crossed into Russia.
Savchenko is viewed by her supporters as a symbol of resistance against Moscow's bid to destabilise its pro-Western leadership by unleashing the eastern conflict -- a charge Russia denies.
She was elected to parliament in absentia on the nationalist ticket of former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko in October 2014 and given her country's highest honour by Poroshenko in March 2015.
A.O.Scott--AT