Weekend Herald

Putin critic shot dead in Ukraine

Former Communist Party member who defected feared for his life

- Andrew Roth Gryvnak

A former Russian member of Parliament who defected to Ukraine and began sharply criticisin­g Russian President Vladimir Putin was gunned down in downtown Kiev yesterday in an apparent contract killing.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called the murder of Denis Voronenkov, a former member of Russia’s Communist Party who fled to Kiev in October last year, an “act of state terrorism by Russia”.

A suspected assailant was arrested after Voronenkov was shot twice in the head, dying on the spot. The suspect’s identity or other details were not immediatel­y made public. In Moscow, a Kremlin spokesman denied Russian involvemen­t in the killing.

But Russia’s critics were likely to draw parallels between the slaying and the deaths of other Putin foes. It also raises further alarm in Washington, where Russia has come under scrutiny for allegedly trying to influence the presidenti­al election to aid Donald Trump.

In an interview with the Washington Post on Wednesday — less than 72 hours before his death — Voronenkov complained about anonymous threats against him and his wife, Maria Maksakova, a former member of the United Russia party founded by Putin, with whom he fled to Kiev last year.

After receiving Ukrainian citizenshi­p in December, he testified in the case against Viktor Yanukovych, the former Ukrainian leader who was toppled in a 2014 revolution after dozens of protesters were killed in shooting in downtown Kiev.

Before fleeing Russia, Voronenkov was the target of a fraud investigat­ion. He was formally charged in February after a highprofil­e interview where he compared the patriotic fervour in Russia to Nazi Germany.

Voronenkov said the charges against him over a corporate raiding case had been fabricated by his political enemies.

On Wednesday, he called the Russian state under Putin “totalitari­an” and said he had always opposed Russia’s annexation of Crimea despite having voted for it in 2014 in Parliament. He said he planned to live in Kiev for the foreseeabl­e future, where he had friends in the pro- Western bureaucrac­y from his time in the Soviet army.

He could likely return to Russia only after Putin’s death, he said.

In the three years since Ukraine’s revolution, Kiev has become something of a meeting point for Russian opponents of the Kremlin. The city has taken on the role of a modern Casablanca just 800km southwest of Moscow, where members of Russia’s liberal, leftist and nationali st opposition — as well as those seeking to escape a tightly controlled political landscape in Moscow — have congregate­d in relative safety.

Voronenkov’s death, if tied to a Kremlin order, indicates that Kiev has become a more dangerous place for them.

Voronenkov and his wife were concerned about their security, specifical­ly citing their conflict with Russia. He said on Wednesday that fears of harassment forced him to keep secret the location of where they rented a house outside of Kiev with their children.

“For our personal safety, we can’t let them know where we are,” he said. “It’s a totally amoral system and in its anger it may go to extreme measures. There’s been a demonisati­on of us. It’s hard to say what will happen.”

 ??  ?? Denis Voronenkov
Denis Voronenkov

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