A staunch defender of the Ukrainian language and a leader of the Euromaidan, the 2013–2014 pro-European protests that led to Ukraine’s geopolitical reorientation away from Russia, Parubiy was regarded by many of his compatriots as a founding father of the country’s post-independence identity.
By contrast, Russian propaganda has for years accused Parubiy of organising a 2014 massacre of Russian-Ukrainians in Odesa, and continues to circulate a long-debunked narrative claiming that Parubiy commanded snipers that shot on protesters during Euromaidan.
Should investigators manage to prove that Russia ordered the hit, as they already suspect, Parubiy will become the most senior Ukrainian politician to have been the victim of a contract killing in Ukraine’s history. Though the shooter, Mykhaylo Stselnikov, claims to have acted alone to avenge the death of his son in the war, his explanation remains unconvincing.