

Journalist Yulia Kiriyenko drew attention to the video from Fedienko. She noted that the people's deputy, who is a member of the National Security Committee, publishes a video on YouTube in which he publishes information about the place of manufacture of Ukrainian electronic warfare equipment, names the city and the plant, and “then 26 people with children die in this city.”
Kiriyenko added that Fedienko’s video was deleted by the user, but she saved the main fragments of the recording. “This is a story about useful idiots for the enemy […] It's one thing when it's an ordinary citizen. Another thing is when a member of the National Security Committee undermines this security with his actions,” the journalist pointed out.
The head of the Ternopil OVA wrote on Facebook on November 20 that “the video that the enemy could have used to prepare an attack on Ternopil was transferred to the SBU.”
He added that “everyone who distributes it is also acting irresponsibly!”
At the same time, Fedienko told Interfax-Ukraine that in his video, which has already been deleted from YouTube, he “did not distribute anything exclusive,” and “everything is in open sources.”
“I was not in Ternopil. This exhibition was in Kyiv. The exhibition was in September, it was open and public,” the people’s deputy assured.
Fedienko also reposted a message on Facebook from military expert Sergei Beskrestnov (call sign Flash), in which he questioned the advisability of a Russian missile strike on the Orion plant in Ternopil, which “is actually not working.”
“This is a lesson for everyone, including me, that you shouldn’t remember anything at all, even something that’s not secret, because tomorrow something will happen and you’ll be to blame,” Beskrestnov emphasized.




