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Ukraine says it used a car bomb to take out a Russian-backed politician in an occupied city

Nov 8, 2023, 23:30 IST
Business Insider
A burned car in the center of Odesa, Ukraine.Getty Images
  • Ukraine said it killed a Russian-backed lawmaker in eastern Ukraine on Wednesday.
  • Mikhail Filiponenko, a deputy in Luhansk, died in a car bomb explosion, per Ukrainian intelligence.
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A pro-Russian lawmaker was killed in a coordinated attack carried out by resistance fighters in eastern Ukraine, Ukraine's military intelligence agency said in a statement.

Mikhail Filiponenko, a member of the Russian-backed parliament in occupied Luhansk, and a former leader of its armed forces, died in a car bomb explosion on Wednesday, per the statement.

Andriy Cherniak, a representative of Ukrainian intelligence, confirmed to Politico Europe that Ukraine was behind the bombing.

"Yeah, it was our operation," he told the outlet.

Luhansk Information Center, a news agency run by Moscow-installed officials in the region, quoted Filiponenko's son as saying his father died of his wounds.

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The Ukrainian intelligence statement said that it knew the home and work addresses of all Russian-backed lawmakers who defected in the Russian-occupied territories, suggesting more officials could be targeted.

Filiponenko joined Russian-backed mercenaries in 2014, and helped Moscow take control of the eastern provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk, according to Reuters.

His death is the latest in a series of assassinations that Ukraine has carried out in the occupied territories since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Last month, the Washington Post reported that Valery Gerasimov, Russia's Chief of the General Staff, had also come close to death in a Ukrainian strike on the front lines, citing Ukrainian intelligence.

The report did not specify when or where the attack took place.

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Prior to that, Darya Dugina, a prominent war supporter and daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, commonly known as "Putin's brain," was assassinated by a car bomb outside Moscow in August 2022, Insider previously reported.

Major-General Kyrylo Budanov, the head of Ukraine's military intelligence service, told The Times of London in May that his agents had killed Kremlin-backed propagandists who support the war.

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