Oles Oleksiiovych Buzina (Ukrainian: Оле́сь Олексі́йович Бузина́; 13 July 1969[1] – 16 April 2015) was a Ukrainian journalist and writer known for his criticism of Ukrainian politics and for supporting closer ties between Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia.
He was found killed by a gunshot on 16 April 2015, near his residence in Kyiv. The murder case remains unsolved.
Biography
Oles Buzina was born on 13 July 1969 in Kyiv and attended local schools. In 1992 he graduated from the Faculty of PhilologyTaras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv specialising as a teacher of Russian language and literature.[1] He began a career in journalism[1] working for a number of Ukrainian media outlets:[2][citation needed]
Various magazines, such as Natali, EGO Ukraine, XXL Ukraine
From October 2006 Buzina was an anchorman of Teen-liga program on TV channel Inter
Newspaper Segodnya, where he had his own column and blog since 2007
As an expert, he participated in the reality-show Bachelor on TV channel STB from 2011
From 2012 he was host of Po sledam prashurov (In the Footsteps of Ancestors)[3] show on K-1 TV channel.
In January 2015 he became editor-in-chief of Segodnya newspaper, where he had worked for many years.[4] He resigned in March,[5] protesting the censorship of the newspaper's owners, having limited control over newspaper's policy, his absence of control over newspaper's website, and an imposed ban on his appearance on TV and interviews with the press.
Buzina founded his own website, featuring blogs and sale of some of his books online.
He was invited as a guest to numerous talk shows in Russia. Some of his articles were published in the Russian media.
As a writer he published eight books, mainly about prominent figures and the history of Ukraine and Russia.
Personal life
Buzina was married and the father of one daughter.[citation needed]
Politics
In addition to his reporting, Buzina tried to enter politics. He ran in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election for a constituency seat in Kyiv for Russian Bloc[6] but failed to win parliamentary representation.[7] In Constituency No. 223, his 8.22% of votes was insufficient.[6]
On 20 January 2006 he claimed that as a writer he was aware of political censorship in post-Orange Revolution Ukraine, as some publishers were afraid to release his books.[8]
As of April 2009 Buzina was sued 11 times and every single time judges ruled out in his favour.[13] In 2000 he was physically assaulted right after winning in court one of these cases.[2] Some of these legal actions saw Ukrainian politicians as plaintiffs: Pavlo Movchan, Volodymyr Yavorivsky.[8]
On 22 March 2009 he had a cake thrown at him by a FEMEN activist who declared his only fiction book sexist.
Oles Buzina was rated 4th in the "Homophobe of the Year - 2011" list by the Ukrainian gay forum.[14]
He identified himself as both Ukrainian and Russian, though having ethnic Ukrainian parents.[13]
His views on Ukraine expressed on multiple occasions during years of journalism and political commentary included statements that Ukraine should be part of Russia,[13] that it should be a bilingual federal state of Russia[13][15] and that it should favor an alliance Belarus and Kazakhstan rather than joining the European Union.[8][16]
His political stance was criticized[17] for a comment to newspaper Den that he gave in 1999:
...my ideal is the reconstruction of the Russian Empire, but I am forced to adapt to the ugly conditions of "construction" of an independent Ukraine.
In January 2014, Buzina said on a Russian state-owned TV channel Russia-1 that he was receiving constant death threats.[20][non-primary source needed] In April 2015, the Myrotvorets website published his home addresses.[21]
On 16 April, Buzina was found dead near his home.[22]
His killing was one of a few targeting pro-Russian activists or people linked to former president Victor Yanukovych. in the period. Former MP Oleg Kalashnikov was shot and killed in his apartment block the same week.[23] Journalist Sergey Sukhobok was also killed in Kyiv the same week during a dispute that turned violent, followed by the arrest of two suspects.[undue weight? – discuss]
A previously unknown Ukrainian nationalist group calling itself "Ukrainian Insurgent Army" - named after a group of partisans who fought against the Russian army in World War II, claimed responsibility for the murders of Buzina and Kalashnikov, in emails to the parliamentary opposition and to political scientist Volodymyr Fesenko.[23][24][25][26]
Speculations
Markian Lubkivskyi, an advisor at the Security Service of Ukraine, said that linguistic analysis of the telephone call of the "Ukrainian Insurgent Army" indicated they were not native Ukrainian speakers, and Vasyl Vovk, the head of the Main Investigations Directorate of the Security Service of Ukraine, said the organization was fake.[27][24] Analyst Anton Shekhovtsov stated that the "Ukrainian Insurgent Army" is frequently demonised in Russian propaganda. He also speculated that corruption related to Yanukovych's presidency or action by far-right Ukrainian activists were both plausible theories explaining the murder, as was the view of Poroshenko and others that the murders could be provocations by Russian intelligence.[24]
Reactions
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said that the Buzina and Kalashnikov's murders were "a deliberate provocation" aimed at "destabilising the internal political situation in Ukraine and discrediting the political choice of the Ukrainian people", and that he would personally oversee the investigations into the two murders. Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said that the best specialists of the General Procurator’s Office and police would be dealing with the crimes.[24] Ukrainian MP and adviser to the Minister of Internal Affairs Anton Gerashchenko speculated that Buzina’s murder "had been organised by the Russian security services in order to create the atmosphere of terror in Kiev, to carry on the hysteria in the Russian media".[24]
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on live Russian TV that this murder was a political one and offered his condolences to the family of the victim.[28]Radio Free Europe reported that "At 2:05, Ukrainian presidential adviser Anton Herashchenko confirmed the slaying on Facebook. And by 2:17, Russian President Vladimir Putin was already using Buzina's killing to attack Ukraine's "democratic" values during his annual call-in show with the Russian public."[29]
Ukrainian officials blamed "Russian special forces assassins" for the murder.[30]
On 18 June 2015 Minister of the Interior Arsen Avakov announced the arrest of two alleged killers, Andrey Medvedko and Denis Polischuk.[36][37][38] One of the suspects served in the Kyiv-2 Battalion of the Interior Ministry of Ukraine and was a member of the neo-Nazi group "S14",[39] while the other was a member of the nationalist party Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence (UNA-UNSO); both deny responsibility for the murder.[40][41]
On 23 June 2015, Polischuk was released on bail after businessman Oleksiy Tamrazov posted his ₴5 million bail.[42][unreliable source?] However, on 2 July, the decision was overturned by the Shevchenkovsky District Court of Kyiv, and Polischuk was re-arrested.[43] On 9 December 2015, the Pechersky District Court of Kyiv moved Polishuk to house arrest, ordering him to wear an electronic tagging bracelet. On 31 December 2015, Medvenko was also moved to house arrest under similar conditions.[44]
On 25 March 2016, the Pechersky District Court of Kyiv released Polischuk from house arrest and released Medvenko on personal obligation.[45] On 23 May, the Court revoked all restrictive measures on Medvenko.[46][unreliable source?]
In July 2016, it was reported that a lot of major evidence, including photo robots[clarification needed] of the suspects made by eye witnesses, CCTV footage and cell phone monitoring, had been lost from case materials.[47]
By April 2017, no progress had been made in the murder investigation.[48][unreliable source?]
On 28 November 2017, the indictment against Polischuk and Medvenko was sent to the Shevchenkovsky District Court of Kyiv for consideration.[49][50]
^ abcdeAnton Shekhovtsov (23 April 2015). "Who killed Buzina and Kalashnikov?". ZEIT ONLINE (in German). Retrieved 13 June 2023. The name of the group, "Ukrainian Insurgent Army" (also known by its Ukrainian acronym UPA), refers to the name of a historical Ukrainian nationalist movement founded by the radical factions of the Organisation Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and engaged in the struggle against the Soviet rule from 1943 until 1954. The Soviet politicians and historians demonised both the OUN and UPA, and the Russian media still applies the title "banderivtsy" derived from the name of Stepan Bandera, the leader of one of the radical factions of the OUN, to all Ukrainian modern nationalists and even to moderates who support the independence of Ukraine.