‘Grenade among birthday gifts’ kills adviser to Ukraine’s military chief
‘Grenade among birthday gifts’ kills adviser to Ukraine’s military chief
Tue 7 Nov 2023 05.34 CETFirst published on Mon 6 Nov 2023 23.24 CET
A
close adviser to the commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s army has been
killed after a grenade amongst his birthday presents exploded, according
to officials.
“Under tragic circumstances, my
assistant and close friend, Major Gennadiy Chastiakov, was killed … on
his birthday,” Gen Valery Zaluzhny posted on Telegram on Monday, saying
that an “unknown explosive device detonated in one of his gifts”.
Chastiakov’s
death was initially reported as a suspected assassination using a
booby-trapped gift until further details emerged. Ukraine’s interior
minister, Igor Klymenko, released a statement saying Chastiakov had been
showing his son a box with grenades inside that he had received as a
gift.
“At first, the son took the munition in
his hands and began to turn the ring. Then the serviceman took the
grenade away from the child and pulled the ring, causing a tragic
explosion,” Klymenko said.
Police had
identified a fellow soldier who gave the gift, said Klymenko, and seized
two similar grenades. An investigation was under way.
Ukrainian
police said the 13-year-old son was also seriously injured. Ukrainska
Pravda reported Chastiakov’s wife as saying the grenade was in a gift
bag her husband brought home. Some reports suggested the real grenade
was amongst novelty gifts shaped to look like grenades.
Chastiakov had left a wife and four children,
Klymenko said. Zaluzhny added that since Russia invaded Ukraine in
February 2022, Chastiakov had been “fully devoting his life to the armed
forces of Ukraine and the fight against Russian aggression”.
Also
on Monday, Ukrainian forces said they had successfully destroyed a
Russian ship in the Kerch shipyard in annexed Crimea, and Ukraine’s
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said he did not believe the time was
right for the country to hold elections, amid a brewing debate on the
possibility of a presidential vote in 2024.
All
elections including the presidential vote due to take place next spring
are technically cancelled under the martial law that has been in effect
since the war began last year.
“We must
decide that now is the time of defence, the time of battle, on which the
fate of the state and people depends,” Zelenskiy said in his daily
address. He said it was a time for the country to be united, not
divided, and added: “I believe that now is not the time for elections.”
Ukraine’s foreign minister said last week that
Zelenskiy was weighing up whether it would be possible to hold elections
next year, given the invasion. He cautioned that polling would be
difficult to hold due to the large number of Ukrainians abroad and soldiers fighting on the front.
Parliamentary elections that would have taken place last month have already been cancelled because of the war.
Zelenskiy,
who was elected in 2019, said in September he was “ready” to hold
elections if necessary and was in favour of allowing international
observers to monitor the vote.
The Ukrainian
leader’s approval rating soared after the war began, but some divisions
have emerged. Former presidential aide Oleksiy Arestovych announced this
week that he would run against his former boss after criticising the
slow pace of the country’s counteroffensive.
The
sprawling frontline between the two warring sides has barely moved in
almost a year, despite a Ukrainian counteroffensive that began in June.
The
Ukrainian president has regularly met western leaders to try to secure
more air defences and stave off international fatigue with the conflict,
which has now lasted for more that 600 days.
Zelenskiy
has also been forced to deny that the conflict has reached a deadlock,
but admitted on Sunday that it had reached a “difficult situation”