Irish Daily Mail

Poignant last post of iconic ‘ray of hope’ warrior

Revealed: Final pictures and poetic message of Azov soldier before capture in Russian double-cross

- From James Franey in Odesa News@dailymail.ie

IT was a photograph shared around the world: The brave Ukrainian soldier basking in a beam of sunshine penetratin­g the darkness of his undergroun­d fortress.

But that ray of hope was extinguish­ed last night as it emerged Dima Kozatsky was among the hundreds of fighters captured by the Russians as their brave resistance came to an end.

For over 80 days they had defended the besieged Azovstal steelworks in the coastal city of Mariupol. Mr Kozatsky, from the elite Azov Regiment, had documented their struggle in a series of pictures tweeted from his undergroun­d base as Russia bombed the Soviet-era factory.

His iconic self-portrait in sunshine will ensure their fight can never be forgotten, and he added more pictures and words to that legacy in the final hours of the fight. In his last post, he wrote: ‘Well that’s all there is. Thank you for sheltering me, Azovstal – the place of my death and my life.’

Mercifully, however, it can be revealed that he is still alive though ‘in captivity’. Russia’s defence minister claimed last night 1,908 of the crack troops had surrendere­d. Sergei Shoigu said he believed as many as 600 were still inside the plant.

Friends described Mr Kozatsky as ‘a fierce patriot’ who dropped out of his studies at a Polish university in 2014 so he could join the anti-government protests that toppled former Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovych. The ex-radio host then signed up for the Ukrainian army the following year before joining Azov in 2017.

Moscow has repeatedly made bogus claims that the unit, owing to its nationalis­t roots, poses a risk to European security because it is made up of so-called ‘Nazis’.

This is the place of my death and my life... its defenders are a symbol of fortitude for the whole world

Mr Kozatsky, also known online as Orest, became the unit’s de facto official photograph­er during the months-long siege in which hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers and civilians hid from Russian attacks.

In an interview with Ukrainian media outlet Hromadske, the native of Malyn, near Kyiv, described the ‘endless horror’ of this daily fight for survival – and how it became a symbol of hope for the world.

He said: ‘We have wounded fighters and the dead here who we are protecting. We cannot abandon them, as they have contribute­d their maximum to this war – some at the cost of their own lives, some

‘Thanks for sheltering me, Azovstal’

at the cost of their health. He added: ‘There are brother-in-arms who need proper treatment, but they cannot get it. Medication ran out a long time ago. All the defenders of Mariupol and Azovstal have now become a symbol of fortitude not only for Ukraine, but also for the world.’

Russia’s supreme court will rule on May 26 whether to classify the battalion as ‘a terrorist organisati­on’, while Russian MPs have called for them to face trial for alleged war crimes. The Ukrainian government said it will try to bring them back home in a prisoner swap with captured Russian troops.

 ?? ?? Inspiring: Dima Kozatsky, left and inset, took the iconic self-portrait
Inspiring: Dima Kozatsky, left and inset, took the iconic self-portrait
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 ?? ?? Wreckage: Dima, circled, among the debris at the Azovstal steelworks
Wreckage: Dima, circled, among the debris at the Azovstal steelworks

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