Putin's black list with Ukraine leaders

Russian secret services have lists of assassinated or to be liquidated, who include prominent Ukrainian politicians, officials and public personalities. Former President of the Ukrainian Parliament, Andrii Parbi, who was killed in Lvot by a Russian agent, was on one of them just before the war, says deputy Irina Herașcenko in his party, European solidarity.

Former President of Ukrainian Parliament, Andrii Parubi/Photo: X
For centuries, Russia has aimed to reduce the fundamental voices of Ukrainian identity: the abolition of hetmanat and the Cazacesti traditions, the assimilation of the Ukrainian culture, the Bolshevik terror, with systemic purification, and the violence of Soviet regimes. Generations of writers, artists, scientists and politicians were either physically eliminated or morally decimated in a completely political struggle.
Today, the strategy of “pace of beheading” that the Kremlin has adapted at the military level also felt the painting in political and civil areas-through murder, crime attempts, campaigns of intimidation and psychological pressure on those considered symbols of resistance.
An ambitious leader – and for a long time
Andrii Parubi, a prominent leader of the Euromaidan movement, 52 years old, has survived the attacks since 2014 – from Grenades to complex plots. Despite them, continued to fight, to the lethal action planned by Russian agents in 2025.
Deputy Irina Herașcenko, from the Solidarized European Party, revealed for Radio NV that Parrubi are on a list that Russian secret services have made before the war, along with other remarkable names in Ukrainian public life.
The figure of Parubi was the moral relief of two years of protest and revolution: co -founder of the Social -National Party of Ukraine (1991), author of the program that identifies “the Russian state as the root of the evil in Ukraine”, commander of Ukrainian House in 2004 and emblematic figure of the Euromaidan movement (2013-2014).
Mechanisms of fear – beyond bullets
“From the first moment, I knew that Moscow was in the back.”says Herașcenko. Including the first attempt on Parubi's life, triggered by a grenade at a hotel in Kiev in December 2014.
More worrying, Russian intelligence resorted to blackmail: he tried to recruit a suspect on Telegram, using personal pain-Parubi's missing son-for psychologically collapsed.
To prevent such methods, the European Solidity group proposes to urgently a law to dean Telegram users in Ukraine – a step towards digital responsibility for recruitment and blackmail.
Herașcenko draws attention to the fact that Russian terror is not exclusively military, but is a continuous aggression and psychosis on Ukrainian leaders, based on manipulation and fear.




