
Rumours had spread among separatists for several weeks about radical Pravy Sektor (or « Right Sector ») militants hiding amid government forces loyal to Kiev to perpetrate actions targeting pro-Russian groups in eastern Ukraine. Though a small political force, Pravy Sektor played a significant part in the street fights the lead to the downfall of former president Viktor Yanukovitch during the Maidan Revolution in Kiev last February. Formed as an alliance of tiny far-right groups, the movement is described as « fascist » by the pro-Russian populations of eastern Ukraine, which regularly accuse its militants of stirring trouble by any means. These accusations have been constantly repeated by numerous Russian media close to the Kremlin, and have become an important part of the ferocious disinformation war currently playing out in Ukraine. But they had, till now, essentially not been substantiated, to the point of being poked at as a farce on twitter and the Internet.

Sequence of events:
The group of over a dozen gunmen arrived in Krasnoarmeysk at about 14h30 on Sunday, chasing local referendum activists from the voting centre, where the ballot was being held.

A Shadowy militia:
Though there is no evidence of whom the shadowy militia answers to, Paris Match was able to establish that one of Pravy Sektor's leaders was indeed among the gunmen on Sunday. Andrey Denisenko, deputy chief of nationalist group and its acting head in the Dnepropetrovsk region, appears on stage in pictures taken by a Paris Match photographer during a party gathering in Kiev last March, as the movement announced it would take part in upcoming presidential elections. He also appeared on several Internet websites during a press conference announcing his group's creation.

Several witness also said they heard some of the gunmen speaking with strong western Ukraine accents. They also noticed that some of the gunmen appeared to come from the Caucasus area, possibly mercenaries from Chechnya. Other gunmen never spoke a word and seemed foreign to the region. French war photographer Jerome Sessini spent about an hour face to face with the gunmen before they opened fire. « I found that their general attitude and their very precise techniques gave off the impression that they were American mercenaries, or people trained by American mercenaries » said Sessini.
« I can't guarantee this for sure, but I'd give it a 95 per cent, » added the photographer, who frequently interacted with various U.S. security contractors during his years covering the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In Krasnoarmeysk, several of the gunmen were masked or wearing keffieh-style cloaks, which made it difficult to pinpoint whom among them had fired the lethal shots.
Civilians under shock:
It was already 5 pm by the time a small crowd of unarmed civilians tried to reclaim the town hall from the militia. An amateur video, handed to Paris Match by a neighbour, shows tension rising as the militiamen gradually loose ground.
One of the crowd leaders is Ruslan Sergeyvitcch Pilipenko. The sturdy 32 year-old works as a minor in the area. He can be seen on the images, angrily pushing toward the militiamen. One gunman pushes him back with his riffle butt, but Ruslan keeps pressing forward, despite the barrel pointed at his stomach. The gunman then opens fire point blank, shattering his left ankle.
The crowd rushes in to help, without measuring the full scale of the incident. For, a few metres behind, Vadim Khoudich has just collapsed. « He wasn't armed, he wasn't aggressive in any way, he wasn't even doing anything, » says his friend and neighbour Vitalik Naydiomov. On the video he shows us, one of the masked gunmen is clearly visible at a first-floor window.
« It's no stray bullet : the doctor told us he'd shot to kill, directly. » In front of the town hall, a hole in the tarred ground shows where the incoming round hit. Vadim died on the spot. A single bullet struck him in the chin, and ripped through his spine on the way out. Fellow protestors dragged him onto a lawn, powerless, just as the gunmen were jumping into their minivan to leave. As they departed, Youri Nikolenko angrily tossed a stone at the them.
The 48-year-old was struck back by a lethal bullet to the right shoulder. He is pictured collapsing, just in front of Vadim's corps.
The 38-year-old plumber leaves two daughters: Valeria, 14, and Vlada, two and a half. « He called me on the phone to warn that there was trouble at the town hall and that I shouldn't come to vote, » says his widow, Natasha, as neighbours file past the casket in the Soviet-era building in the rather dishevelled housing project where he lived. «Minutes later, he was dead," adds Natasha, a frail brunette with a shaky voice, hiding her tears behind large smoked glasses. « Some people are trying to understand what happened. But I'm only left with the suffering, » she goes on. « Can you even understand that? » she asks, removing her sunglasses to stare directly in our eyes. « No you can't, of course not. Nobody can... »









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