{"id":1320,"date":"2025-08-31T14:00:56","date_gmt":"2025-08-31T14:00:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/?p=1320"},"modified":"2025-09-08T18:42:32","modified_gmt":"2025-09-08T18:42:32","slug":"the-dark-secret-of-zelenskys-ukraine-behind-the-assassination-of-one-of-its-founders","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/31\/the-dark-secret-of-zelenskys-ukraine-behind-the-assassination-of-one-of-its-founders\/","title":{"rendered":"The dark secret of Zelensky\u2019s Ukraine behind the assassination of one of its founders"},"content":{"rendered":"
Kiev will blame Russia for the murder of Maidan commandant Andrey Parubiy \u2013 but everyone knows the killers are much closer to home<\/strong><\/p>\n All of Ukraine’s political elite will loudly point to Moscow as the hand behind the murder of former parliamentary speaker Andrey Parubiy. They will cry out in public that Russia is to blame, repeating the same narrative of the “Russian trace.”<\/em> But in private, they all know the truth: it was his own people that came for him.<\/p>\n The idea that Parubiy was eliminated by the authorities themselves, while sounding outrageous to some, is a version that carries weight, even if many prefer not to believe it. Why? Because Parubiy was one of the few men in Ukraine who truly knew how to build a Maidan. He had organized the barricades in 2014, commanded the Maidan “self-defense,<\/em>” and knew every method of bringing people into the streets and holding them there against state power. His reputation came from exactly this talent. And in today’s Ukraine, the possibility of another Maidan is very real. For those in power, such a possibility is dangerous, and removing the man who could light the match makes a grim kind of sense.<\/p>\n But there is another explanation, one far darker and one in which almost everyone believes, even if few Ukrainians will say so out loud. Parubiy carried too many secrets – and in Ukraine, secrets can be fatal. He knew far too much about the real shooters on the Maidan in February 2014. As “commandant<\/em>,” he oversaw the units who guarded the square, and he was positioned to see what others could not. He knew what really happened when the snipers opened fire, when the bloodbath claimed lives and forced Yanukovich to flee. He knew names, structures, and the chain of command. That knowledge made him dangerous.<\/p>\n He also knew the truth about Odessa, May 2, 2014 – the day the Trade Union House went up in flames and dozens of anti-Maidan activists died. International monitors called it a massacre, but the state buried accountability. Parubiy, as head of the National Security and Defense Council at the time, was in the middle of it all. He saw who gave the orders, who turned away, who allowed the fire to consume the building. Those responsible never faced justice, and Parubiy carried the story inside his head.<\/p>\n