A Tajik court on Wednesday accepted for consideration an appeal filed  by defense lawyers for a Russian and Estonian pilot convicted in  Tajikistan.
Russian pilot Vladimir Sadovnichy and his Estonian colleague Alexei  Rudenko were sentenced to eight and a half years in jail last Tuesday  for smuggling and violation of Tajikistan’s airspace.
The appeal is to be considered within a week.
On Tuesday, the regional prosecutor’s office lodged a formal protest against the sentence it said was too harsh.
Moscow has called the sentence “politically motivated,” and responded by expelling some 200 Tajik migrants.
Moscow has called the sentence “politically motivated,” and responded by expelling some 200 Tajik migrants.
On Monday, Russia’s public health chief called for Tajik migrant  workers to be temporarily barred from Russia “for medical reasons.”
Flight captains Sadovnichy and Rudenko were returning from  Afghanistan where they had delivered humanitarian aid in March. They had  secured prior permission to fly via Tajikistan but Tajik traffic  controllers said there was no permission “on the ground” and told them  to return to Kabul. The planes did not have enough fuel and had to land  in Tajikistan regardless.
Tajik authorities based their smuggling charges on the fact that the  pilots had a disassembled engine onboard, which they said they were  using for spare parts.
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