Video footage shows him
dressed in military fatigue with a Saint George ribbon tied to his left arm as
the self-proclaimed commander of the “Donbass People’s Militia.” Sitting beside
Denis Pushilin, who calls him the chairman of “People’s Republic of Donbass,” the
Russian acknowledged that the SBU on April 25 had detained self-proclaimed Sloviansk
Deputy Mayor Ihor Perepychayenko in Donetsk Airport.

Strelkov, who the SBU has depicted with only a composite drawing, accused
the eight Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe military inspectors, whom pro-Russian militants abducted on April 25, of being “NATO spies.”

He added they would only be exchanged for pro-Russian “activists” who
Ukrainian authorities have in custody. Known under the codename Strilok in alleged command-and-control recordings
that the SBU has made public, Strelkov claimed that the four roadblocks that the
counterterrorism operation took over on April 24-25 are now back under the
control of Kremlin-backed militants.

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He and Pushilin announced plans to hold an oblast-wide referendum in Donetsk on May 11 that asks one question: “Do you support the act of the proclamation of the People’s Republic of Donbass?”

Strelkov is wanted by authorities for numerous crimes, including
terrorism. He is believed to be the chief commander of pro-Russian forces in
eastern Ukraine in charge of Russian Military Intelligence personnel, subversives,
militants, and a network of Russian and Ukrainian agents working on behalf of
Russia.

An Security Service of Ukraine sketch of Igor Strelkov.

Officials in Moscow have denied any involvement in the unrest in eastern
Ukraine and claim that Ukrainians are the only ones taking part in a separatist
movement.

The SBU has implicated Strelkov in the ambush of a Ukrainian anti-terrorist
team on April 13 that left one SBU captain dead. He also is suspected of being
involved in the kidnapping of politicians, civic activists and journalists,
including the murder of Horlivka City Councilman Volodymyr Rybak.

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Kyiv Post editor Mark
Rachkevych can be reached at [email protected].
 

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