Los Angeles Times

Putin critic shot dead in Ukraine attack

Kiev blames Moscow, which denies charge, after ex-Russian lawmaker is killed.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent. Special correspond­ent Mansur Mirovalev in Moscow contribute­d to this report.

KIEV, Ukraine — A former Russian lawmaker and fierce critic of President Vladimir Putin who fled to Ukraine was shot dead outside a luxury hotel in Kiev on Thursday in what Ukraine’s president described as a Kremlin-orchestrat­ed act of state terrorism.

Denis Voronenkov, 45, and his bodyguard were attacked by a gunman as they were walking toward the Premier Palace, a five-star hotel in central Kiev on Thursday morning. Another Russian dissident, Ilya Ponomarev, said later Voronenkov was on his way to meet him when he was shot.

The killing quickly generated speculatio­n that the Russian government could be behind yet another attack against a Kremlin critic. Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko, who called the killing an act of Russian “state terrorism,” met with Ukrainian law enforcemen­t agencies.

“Here is an obvious pattern of the Russian special services,” Poroshenko said in the meeting, according to state news agencies.

Russian officials denied involvemen­t in the slaying and accused Ukraine of being responsibl­e for Voronenkov’s death to “provoke” the Kremlin.

Others blamed the reaction on Ukrainian “Russophobi­a.”

“Any speculatio­ns about the alleged Russian involvemen­t are absurd,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalist­s in a conference call.

Russian authoritie­s last year opened a fraud case against Voronenkov, a former Communist Party member in Russia’s parliament, which he claimed was politicall­y motivated. He fled to Ukraine in October and settled in Kiev with his wife, Maria Maksakova, an opera singer and a former lawmaker in the United Russia party, the same party as Putin.

Russia officially charged him last month.

Voronenkov had obtained Ukrainian citizenshi­p in October and agreed to testify against ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who is living in exile in Russia and being tried in absentia for treason and corruption in Ukraine. The pro-Russia Yanukovych left Ukraine in 2014 amidst a mass, anti-government protest movement.

After Yanukovych left Ukraine, Voronenkov repeatedly lambasted the country’s new, pro-Western authoritie­s.

“Even in the opposition circles, his flight to the Ukrainian side was seen as controvers­ial, some opposition leaders called him a crook,” Ponomarev told Russia’s independen­t Dozhd television network. “I said he was not a crook, but a man who was very dangerous to corrupt Russian law enforcers, who really investigat­ed things.”

Since fleeing Russia, Voronenkov had complained to journalist­s and Ukrainian authoritie­s about threats to his and his family’s safety. A spokesman for the Ukrainian Ministry of Interior said the state had issued him a bodyguard for his protection.

Voronenkov and Ponomarev are among Russian dissidents who Ukrainian political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said have fled Putin’s authoritat­ive regime since the annexation of Crimea in 2014. Ponomarev was the only Russian lawmaker to vote against the annexation of Crimea.

Fesenko, director at the Penta Centre for Political Studies in Kiev, said many business people, journalist­s and others live in Ukraine because they felt unsafe in Russia.

“So, to say that Ukraine is suffering from Russophobi­a is a joke,” Fesenko said. “It’s not Ukrainian media that is writing and complainin­g about Voronenkov now living in Ukraine. It’s the Russian press. Who does such a killing benefit? Not Ukraine.”

Russia critics point to various cases which they say raise suspicion about the Kremlin. Those include the 2015 slaying of Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister and Putin critic who was gunned down near the Kremlin, and the 2006 death in London of Putin opponent Alexander Litvinenko of radioactiv­e polonium poisoning. A British judge ruled last year the poisoning “probably” occurred under orders from the Russian president.

On Thursday, investigat­ors said the gunman approached Voronenkov as he was walking on the sidewalk near where his car was parked and appeared to ask him a question.

The gunman fired off eight rounds, hitting Voronenkov twice in the head. He died on the scene.

The bodyguard shot the assailant as he attempted to flee, according to Artyom Shevchenko, the director of communicat­ions at Ukraine’s Ministry of Interior. The assailant later died in a Kiev hospital from gunshot wounds, officials said. They did not identify the gunman.

Outside the Premier Palace, workers were busy scrubbing the sidewalk to clean the blood left behind.

“Ukraine is under attack by Russia, and Mr. Voronenkov was a key witness in the criminal case against Yanukovych,” Shevchenko said. “The beneficiar­y of this killing is the Kremlin.”

 ?? Sergei Supinsky AFP/Getty Images ?? A POLICEMAN in Kiev, Ukraine, holds back Maria Maksakova, the wife of Denis Voronenkov, at the site where the former Russian lawmaker was killed.
Sergei Supinsky AFP/Getty Images A POLICEMAN in Kiev, Ukraine, holds back Maria Maksakova, the wife of Denis Voronenkov, at the site where the former Russian lawmaker was killed.

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