"My client and I are not surprised by the court's decision. I received an instruction from Nadia Savchenko not to contest this decision in the detention facility yesterday. She wants the trial to begin and end as soon as possible. As to positive things, I want to say we have won a month to prepare for court hearings," Novikov said. He expects the first-instance court to convict Savchenko and sentence her to 25 years in prison. "Mr Markin in his speech mentioned 25 years. I believe that will be the sentence handed out by the first-instance court," Novikov said. The lawyer said the Savchenko case is expected to draw attention to the problem that Russian women have no right to be tried by a jury. "Women in Russia have no right to be tried by a jury under the pretext that they [women] are not sentenced to life in prison. I believe depriving a person of the right to be tried by a jury under any pretext constitutes the deprivation of an important right. After the Savchenko trial, we will look into the issue of why women are second-rate people in Russia," Novikov said. According to earlier reports, the Rostov region's court on Friday declined Savchenko's request for a change of venue and for her trial to be transferred to Moscow. The Savchenko criminal case will be tried by the Donetsk City Court in the Rostov region. Savchenko's defence say the claims of her complicity in two journalists' deaths in eastern Ukraine are fabricated, and that she was abducted by separatists and taken over the border to Russia. Ukraine has repeatedly protested against her kidnapping and imprisonment demanding her immediate release.