Ukrainian Kill List

From InfraWiki

The Ukrainian kill list, known officially as Myrotvorets (or Mirotvorets) is a website and "NGO" based in Kiev which is best known for hosting a list of people who are considered "enemies of Ukraine", it equally includes doxxing of these individuals.[1]


There are also rather interesting findings associated with the website that might indicate a direct link to NATO, on top of the website having previously (in its earlier days) mentioned their partnership with the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU).

History

The website was created in December 2014, almost a year ago after the Euromaidan color revolution, it was founded by a figure named George Tuka, a Ukrainian politician who later "served" as "governor of Luhansk Oblast" (Ukrainian side) and he also claimed to have taken part in Arab Spring protests in Egypt when he lived there.

Despite the founding, the organization is headed by an anonymous figure only known by the alias of "Roman Zaitsev", who "was" a "former" employee of the Luhansk branch of the SBU, it claims to be a completely independent from the Ukrainian government and yet, by their own words is used by the Ukrainian government for border checkpoints and Tuka has claimed employees of the Russian FSB have been arrested due to it.[2]

The kill list

Thousand of individuals and their private information have been hosted by the website, including ordinary citizens, journalists, world leaders, actors, politicians and more including people beyond just the borders Russia or Ukraine, some of these individuals have also been connected to either attempts or succesful assassinations against them.[3]

Some notable people who have been included are :

  • Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
  • Musician Roger Waters
  • Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder[4]
  • Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán[5]
  • Henry Kissinger (ironically)[6]
  • Canadian Journalist Eva Bartlett
  • Elon Musk[7]
  • The Grayzone Journalists Aaron Mate and Anya Parampil[8]
  • Jackson Hinkle[9]

Some of the people who were on the list, as previously mentioned, were in fact victims of assassinations, the most notable example is Darya Dugina. Shamelessly, after her slaying, the website added a message to her name saying that she was "liquified". Another example is former Ukrainian parliamentarian Oleg Kalashnikov who died just days after his inclusion in the list.[10]

The NATO Connection

Despite the very obvious "usefulness" of NATO employing such a list, there's some rather weird findings that some individuals have uncovered from the website, several domain names associated with the websites were checked and their IPs show that they are from Brussels and even specify "Nato-hq", while one could argue this isn't substantial proof in itself, what are the odds of such a coincidence? [11]