The Daily Telegraph

Gunmen target Ukrainian president’s aide

Leader claims oligarchs angry at curbs may have been trying to intimidate him by shooting at adviser

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva MOSCOW CORRESPOND­ENT

THE Ukrainian president said an assassinat­ion attempt on one of his senior aides was an attempt to intimidate him amid a row with powerful oligarchs, and promised a robust response.

Volodymyr Zelensky’s close adviser and friend, Serhiy Shefir, was targeted yesterday morning when his car came under fire from gunmen with automatic weapons, officials said.

Mr Shefir escaped unscathed, but his driver was severely wounded.

Mr Zelensky, 43, who is currently in New York attending the UN General Assembly, posted a video in response saying he was unsure who was behind the attack but he viewed it as an attempt to intimidate him.

“To send me their regards by shooting at my friend’s car from the forest is a sign of weakness,” the Ukrainian leader said. “My response will be strong.”

The comedian-turned-politician hinted at Ukraine’s powerful oligarchs possibly being behind the shooting, saying that his team’s “course towards changes, cleansing our economy, fighting crime and major groups of financial influence is unchanged”.

“Serhiy Shefir’s car has been shot at by unknown people. Their intentions were clearly serious, the car was riddled by automated fire,” Iryna Venediktov­a, Ukraine’s prosecutor general, said in a statement, adding that more than 10 bullets hit the car.

Mr Shefir was attacked just a few days before Mr Zelensky’s Bill to rein in Ukraine’s super-rich oligarchs will be debated in parliament.

The legislatio­n could bar them from funding political parties and other activities in a bid to cut their outsized role in Ukrainian politics.

Ukraine’s super-rich own entire industries, but they have also heavily invested in political campaigns and media empires that are ready to take down any politician if they fall out of favour with the channel’s owner.

Mr Zelensky became the country’s president in 2019 after standing as a wild card candidate.

Several years before he was elected, he foretold his future when he played the lead role in a comedy series about a teacher who becomes president.

Mr Shefir, the chief producer of Mr Zelensky’s production company and

‘To send me their regards by shooting at my friend’s car from the forest is a sign of weakness’

one of the main scriptwrit­ers for the hit television programme, has been Mr Zelenskiy’s chief aide since his election in 2019.

Ukrainian police said Mr Shefir’s car came under fire as it was driving on a highway in the woods near the village of Lisnyky, about 12 miles from the capital Kyiv.

Mr Shefir appeared in front of the press on yesterday afternoon, saying that there was no reason for anyone to want to kill him. “We were driving, and then the shots rang out. The driver was wounded but he kept going. It was a bit scary,” he said. Mr Shefir insisted that the attack was meant to frighten the Ukrainian leadership.

“I think this is intimidati­on,” he said. “Our president is very strong-willed. He has a spine and won’t be intimidate­d.”

Ukrainian police said they were looking into several motives but they all focus on the adviser’s work for the president.

Mr Sherif said that his car was not bulletproo­f and that he never employed a bodyguard, adding that he will now have to reconsider his security protocol. Ukrainian police yesterday released images of the 57-year-old’s black Audi, riddled with bullet holes.

The driver was taken to hospital but Mr Shefir said his injuries were not life threatenin­g.

Several Ukrainian politician­s have suggested that Russia might be involved in the attack on Mr Shefir without offering any evidence.

A Kremlin spokesman yesterday denied the accusation­s.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Police number the bullet holes in the car carrying Serhiy Shefir, left, a senior adviser to president Volodymyr
Zelensky
Police number the bullet holes in the car carrying Serhiy Shefir, left, a senior adviser to president Volodymyr Zelensky

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom