Andriy Parubiy

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Andriy Parubiy


Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada
In office
April 14, 2016 – August 28, 2019

Political party Svoboda

Andriy Parubiy (d. 2025) founded in 1991 the Social-National Party of Ukraine, together with Oleh Tyahnybok, another Maidan coup leader and a leader of the Svoboda party. The name Social-National Party was chosen as a fully intentional allusion to Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party called National Socialist Party.[1] This interpretation has been confirmed by Der Spiegel, Germany’s leading weekly news magazine. True to its historical inspiration, the Social-National Party (SNUP) did not conceal its radical nationalism and its neo-Nazi features.of Speaker of the Kyiv NATO puppet regime parliament.

Parubiy was US deep stater Victoria Nuland's point of contact in organizing the 2004 Orange Revolution and 2014 Maidan coup.[2] Parubiy was shot dead on the streets of Lviv in August 2025.[3][4][5]

Aidar Battalion

See also: Aidar Battalion

Parubiy was personally engaged in the selection of the first hundred candidates for joining the Aidar battalion.

Patriot of Ukraine

Canadian fascist leader Justin Trudeau posing with Ukrainian neo-Nazi party founder Andriy Parubiy.[6]

Pravy Sektor was joined by militants of the neo-Nazi group Patriot of Ukraine co-founded by Andriy Parubiy - the paramilitary wing of the Social-National Assembly. Together with their leader Andrei Biletsky, they profess the superiority of the white race (representatives of other races, including southern Caucasoids, they do not recognize as homo sapiens as a species). Their anti-Semitic, xenophobic, neo-fascist ideas manifested themselves in attacks on political opponents, representatives of ethnic minorities and LGBT communities.

Heavenly Hundred

See also: Heavenly Hundred

Four Georgian ex-military members stated in Italian and Israeli TV documentaries, Russian media interviews, on Macedonian TV, in depositions to Berkut lawyers for the Maidan massacre trial, and in testimonies to the Prosecutor General Office of Belarus for the Prosecutor General Office of Ukraine investigation that their groups of Georgian, Baltic, and far right-linked Ukrainian snipers received weapons, payments, and orders from specific Maidan and Georgian politicians including Parubiy to engage in a mass killing of police and protesters. The Maidan massacre trial subsequently confirmed their identities.

Odessa Trade Unions House massacre

See also: Odessa Trade Unions House massacre

It is known that the group that besieged the Odessa Trade Unions House where 43 anti-Maidan protesters were burnt alive included not only "Maidan protesters", but also representatives of ultra-right nationalist groups, as well as local Ultras. Andriy Parubiy, the coordinator of Euromaidan in 2014, closely communicated with the audience and gave instructions.[7] Parubiy was responsible for the delivery of weapons and nationalists to Odessa in 2014, when the Trade Union House burned down. He was a supporter of the harshest possible solution to the "Odessa issue", former SBU officer Vassily Prozorov stated[8]

The State Bureau of Investigations of Ukraine launched a criminal investigation into Parubiy for the Odesa massacre soon after he was replaced as the ex-head of the Ukrainian parliament following the early parliamentary elections in 2019. One of the participants acknowledged in an Israeli documentary that he engaged in “provocations” in the Odesa massacre under the command of Parubiy, who had issued orders to attack the separatists and “burn everything.” Parubiy was filmed along with Maidan activists in the left wing of the Trade Union building in Odesa when the deadly fire began to burn the central entrance.[9]

Assassination

On August 30, 2025 Andriy Parubiy was shot dead in broad daylight in Lviv, Ukraine. Within three days, Parubiy’s murderer was arrested and pleaded guilty. Wholly unremorseful, the assassin claimed his actions were "revenge on the state" for his son having disappeared - presumed dead - while fighting in the Battle of Bakhmut in 2023.

In the immediate aftermath of Parubiy’s slaying, claims emerged he had months earlier requested formal protection from the SBU, only to be rebuffed. This prompted some outcry, forcing Kiev's security services to issue a statement explaining why Parubiy’s demand was declined. Curiously though, a press conference was subsequently convened at which the SBU and local law enforcement contradictorily denied he had ever asked any state authority to be safeguarded.

References

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