Zelensky ousts key staffers as Ukraine’s war against Russia continues
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky continued to clean house Saturday even as Russia bombarded the nation, carrying out 75 airstrikes in just 24 hours.
Zelensky ousted two key staffers — his top aide, Serhiy Shefir, along with the nation’s Commissioner for Soldiers’ Rights, Alyona Verbytska, along with four other government workers.
No reasons were offered for their expulsions, The Kyiv Independent reported.
The latest personnel changes come just a day after Zelensky dismissed Andrii Smirnov and Oleksii Dniprov as the deputy heads of his office and are the latest in a series of changes he’s made at the top of the military and government in recent months.
Shefir was appointed as Zelensky’s advisor soon after he assumed the presidential office in May 2019. A personal friend of Zelensky’s, he worked as a producer on “Servant of the People,” the comedy series that shot Zelensky to fame, in which he played a high-school history teacher who becomes Ukraine’s top politician.
In 2021, Shefir survived an assassination attempt, believed to have been orchestrated by the Kremlin.
Zelensky also let go of Natalia Pushkaryova, the president’s external commissioner for volunteer activities and three advisors who were not part of his staff, including Ukrainian entrepreneur Mykhailo Radutsky and economist Oleh Ustensko.
On Tuesday, Zelensky replaced National Security and Defense Council Secretary Oleksiy Danilov with the chief of his Foreign Intelligence Service, Oleksandr Lytvynenko.
In August, the wartime leader fired all of the country’s military recruitment chiefs over corruption claims and followed that move up in September by replacing the nation’s defense minister amid the corruption crackdown.
Since Friday, Russia has also fired 38 missiles on Ukraine, and waged 98 rocket launcher attacks.
In other developments:
- Polish Prime Minister Donald Tuskwarned that Europe has entered a “prewar era,” and called on European nations to increase their defense budgets. “I don’t want to scare anyone, but war is no longer a concept from the past,” Tusk said while addressing a group of journalists. “It’s real and it started over two years ago.”
- More than 100,000 people living in eastern Kharkiv remain without power following recent targeted attacks against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure last week. In a statement, Ukrainian energy provider DTEK said 15 missiles took out a thermal power plant and damaged a number of substations.
- Russian officials are still trying to connect Ukraine to the Moscow concert hall terror attacks despite the claim of responsibility by an ISIS offshoot. In Moscow’s latest attempt, Russians alleged four of the gunmen were captured as they tried fleeing to Kyiv to claim ” a reward.” Ukraine denies any involvement. Meanwhile, American intelligence has confirmed the claims of an Afghanistan arm of the Islamic State that it orchestrated the March 22 attack that left 137 people dead.
- Just in time for Easter, Ukraine’s Pravda reported the World Russian People’s Council adopted an “order” characterizing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a “holy war” and claiming “the entire territory of present-day Ukraine should be included in the area of Russia’s exclusive influence.” The decree also stated Russian soldiers are defending the “unified spiritual space” and the world from “the tyranny of globalism and the victory of the West, which has fallen into Satanism.”