KYIV, Ukraine
Ukraine said Wednesday it was behind the assassination of a Russia-backed politician and former militia leader who died in a car bomb attack in eastern Ukraine.
Mikhail Filiponenko, a deputy
in the pro-Moscow Luhansk regional parliament, was killed on Wednesday morning
when an "unidentified explosive device" detonated under his 4x4,
Russian investigators said earlier.
In a statement issued a few
hours after the attack, Ukraine's military intelligence directorate said it had
carried out a "special operation to eliminate" Filiponenko, working
"jointly with representatives of the resistance movement."
Several high-profile backers
of Russia's assault on Ukraine and Moscow-installed officials have been
attacked since Russia launched its offensive last February — though outright
claims of responsibility by Kyiv are rare.
Filiponenko was a deputy in
the Luhansk regional parliament and a former head of a Moscow-backed separatist
militia set up in 2014 to fight against Kyiv.
Moscow-backed proxies in the
Luhansk and neighboring Donetsk regions of Ukraine launched a civil war in 2014
after a pro-European revolution in Kyiv.
Last year Russia claimed to
annex Luhansk, along with three other Ukrainian regions, despite not having
full control over them.
Earlier on Wednesday Russia's
Investigative Committee published a video of forensics teams working at the
site of the blast, showing a destroyed dark 4x4 car parked at the side of the
road, with blood smeared across the driver's seat.
It said it had opened a criminal investigation.
The Russian-installed head of
the region Leonid Pasechnik hailed Filiponenko as a "real man" and
called his death a "heavy loss" in a post on social media.
Ukraine's military
intelligence said it would continue to target "war criminals and
collaborators" working with Russia.
It claimed Filiponenko had
"personally and brutally tortured" civilians and prisoners of war,
while in the Luhansk militia.
Several pro-Kremlin
politicians and public figures have been targeted since Russia launched its
assault on Ukraine in February 2022.
Last month Oleg Tsaryov, a
pro-Kremlin politician that Moscow was reportedly lining up to lead a puppet
government in Kyiv, survived being shot in his hotel complex on the annexed
peninsula of Crimea.
Moscow has said Ukrainian
secret services were behind that and several other attacks, including the car
bombing of nationalist Daria Dugina outside Moscow last year and the bombing of
military blogger Vladlen Tatarsky in a St. Petersburg cafe in April.
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