
Dramatic moment Putin's ‘war hero' who led slaughter of Mariupol is killed in mysterious ‘suicide bomb attack'
THIS is the dramatic moment Putin's "war hero" who led the bloody airborne slaughter of Mariupol is killed in an apparent suicide bombing.
Major Zaur Gurtsiev, 34, was blown to pieces alongside another man in the city of Stavropol, southern Russia - with officials scrambling to figure out who pushed the button.
7
7
7
Gurtsiev was reportedly on a date with Nikita Penkov, 29, who was carrying the bomb in his bag - possibly unknowingly.
CCTV footage shows Penkov sidling up behind Gurtsiev just before midnight, who is standing still on a city footpath.
There is an enormous flash of fire, sparks and red light as the explosive detonates and pulverises the two men.
Russian media described the incident as a "suicide bombing" in the aftermath - though there is confusion over whether Penkov was privy to the plot.
The two men hooked up for a date after exchanging nude photos, according to a Telegram channel with links to the Russian secret services.
The channel reported: 'During the investigation, explicit correspondence was discovered, where they sent each other nude photos.
'The deputy [mayor] had already invited his new acquaintance to spend time together, but each time the meeting had to be cancelled due to Gurtsiev's business trips, until last night."
The report says that Penkov had been hired by a third party to collect intelligence on Gurtsiev, and given special equipment which could transmit live video.
The kit was stowed his body bag - and fitted with explosives, the account said.
These explosives were then detonated when the two were standing right next to each other - but this could have been done remotely.
Britain will be wiped off the map with nukes unless it stops helping Ukraine, warns Putin's guru 'Professor Doomsday'
Gurtsiev was still alive for around five minutes after bomb went off, according to Russian outlet Shot media.
The major tried to crawl away from the explosion site before succumbing to his injuries.
The Russian Investigative Committee was probing the circumstances of the assassination.
Putin had appointed Gurtsiev as deputy mayor of Stavropol - part of a scheme to fast-track military "heroes" into political careers.
The military man notoriously spearheaded the Russian airborne operation in the battle for Ukrainian city Mariupol - when thousands of civilians were slaughtered.
He was officially married to wife Nadezhda, and they had a young family.
7
7
One local report suggested Penkov knew what he was doing - and points to the fact that he angled his bag towards the doomed major just before the explosion.
Some 15 days ago he rented a flat in the block, outside which the bomb exploded.
Reports said he was on a Russian black list for suspected money laundering.
Neighbours said he was 'strange but polite', and regularly used taxis.
One theory is that he was recruited by Ukrainian special services to target deputy mayor Gurtsiev.
Ukrainian war journalist Denis Kazansky said: 'Gurtsiev was the executioner of Mariupol and a war criminal.
'He reportedly led the airborne portion of the operation to capture the city, meaning he was responsible for the mass civilian casualties he dropped bombs on.'
Nikita's apartment was searched after the explosion.
No explosives were found but a telephone and a laptop were confiscated.
7
7
In the wake of the dramatic assassination, Putin repeated the tired mantra that "family values" are essential to Russia, regardless of progress elsewhere in the world.
Regional governor Vladimir Vladimirov said: 'All versions are being considered, including the organisation of a terrorist attack involving Nazis from Ukraine.'
The Kremlin has long peddled the lie that Nazism is rife in Ukraine - and uses it to justify Russia's illegal invasion.
As chief of the air operation in Maiupol, Gurtsiev oversaw the bloodbath bombing of the city's theatre, where an estimated 600 people died.
In Russia, he was praised for the 'operation to liberate Mariupol' and his "developments in the technology of missile targeting, which allowed them to increase their accuracy and effectiveness several times, including hitting the Azov supply base'.
Gurtsiev was also awarded the Order of Courage.
He was handpicked to be part of Putin's "Time for Heroes" promotion scheme parachuting war heroes - often with blood on their hands - onto the political ladder across Russia.
He also won more significant military honours from Putin, notably the Order For Merit to the Fatherland of the first degree with Swords, and both the Zhukov and Suvorov medals.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
16 minutes ago
- Sky News
Girl, 9, killed in Russian missile attack - as Moscow continues advance on Ukrainian territory
Why you can trust Sky News A Ukrainian child has been killed after a Russian missile attack, as Moscow claims to have captured two villages in Ukraine. Russian troops launched some 109 drones and five missiles across Ukraine overnight on Friday and into Saturday, the Ukrainian air force said. A nine-year-old girl was killed by the strike on the front-line village of Dolynka in the Zaporizhzhia region. A 16-year-old was also injured, Zaporizhzhia's governor, Ivan Fedorov, said. He said "shockwaves" from the blast also damaged houses, cars and outbuildings. The air force said three of the missiles and 42 drones were destroyed by air defences, while another 30 drones failed to reach their targets without causing damage. Meanwhile, 14 people were injured, including four children, after Ukrainian drones struck apartment buildings in the Russian town of Rylsk and the village of Artakovo in the western Kursk region, local acting governor Alexander Khinshtein said. It comes as Russian forces have reportedly captured two villages in Ukraine's Donetsk and Sumy regions. Russian state news agency RIA reported that Novopil in the eastern Donetsk region and Vodolagy in the northeastern Sumy region were captured on Saturday, citing the Russian defence ministry. Sky News could not independently verify the battlefield report. Earlier this week, Moscow claimed to take multiple other settlements in the same two regions, as well as Stroivka in Ukraine's Kharkiv region. As a result of Russian gains, Ukrainian authorities in Sumy ordered mandatory evacuations in 11 more settlements - bringing the total number of settlements under evacuation orders in Sumy, which borders Russia's Kursk region, to 213. 0:44 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Friday some 50,000 Russian troops had amassed in the area with the intention of launching an offensive to carve out a buffer zone inside Ukrainian territory. Russia currently controls almost all of Ukraine's Luhansk region, more than 70% of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson and a small part of the Kharkiv and Sumy regions. The barrage of Russian aerial assaults has meant Ukraine's need for ammunition has become more urgent than ever. Russia has offered Ukraine a second round of peace talks on 2 June in Istanbul, Turkey. Andrii Yermark, a top adviser to Mr Zelenskyy, said Kyiv was ready to resume direct peace talks but that the Kremlin should provide a promised memorandum setting out its position on ending the more than three-year war, before the two delegations sit down to negotiate. Mr Zelenskyy added that Russia was "undermining diplomacy" by withholding the document. "For some reason, the Russians are concealing this document. This is an absolutely bizarre position. There is no clarity about the format," he wrote on Telegram.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Vikings were not all white, pupils to be told
Vikings were 'very diverse' and not all white, according to a guide to teaching schoolchildren. Tutors placed in schools by The Brilliant Club, an educational charity, have been urged to ditch 'Eurocentric' ideas in favour of a 'decolonised narrative' that moves subjects away from a Western focus. A guide produced by the charity suggests ditching the idea that the Vikings were a 'homogenous community of blonde Scandinavians'. Instead, tutors are told to consider teaching that 'Vikings were not all white'. The guidance, intended to make lessons more 'relatable' for pupils, adds that Vikings were ' a very diverse group of people ' with 'diverse religious beliefs' and urges the tutors to consider that 'some Vikings became practising Muslims'. This claim appears to rely on Islamic goods being found in the graves of some Vikings, who traded with the Islamic world. The last large-scale study of Viking DNA, conducted by the University of Cambridge in 2020, suggested that diversity in Scandinavian genetics came from other parts of Europe and what is now Russia. The Brilliant Club runs a scholarship programme that places PhD students in more than 800 schools to tutor underprivileged pupils and help them get to university. Schools can apply to receive tutoring, and PhD students can apply for paid placements in Brilliant Club schools. It has created two 'decolonising your course' toolkits to help tutors with the courses they will deliver when working within schools. The guides present them with a preferred 'decolonised' approach narrative which is contrasted with a 'Eurocentric and colonised' version of history. It states that there is an 'imperative to provide material to students that they can relate to and connect with … part of this should be presenting them with courses where they can see themselves represented positively'. The guidance also stresses that making courses more relatable is not simply about 'adding token Black figures into courses'. 'Anglo-Saxon' controversy Guidance for arts courses suggests tutors should not only teach Romanticism by referencing the great Romantic poets – including Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley and Byron – but find writers who are not just 'upper-class white men'. Tutors are also asked to consider the decolonised narrative of the spread of democracy across the world, which is defined as: 'Parliamentary democratic rule, a form of Western democracy, was exported and enforced on colonial subjects for the purpose of exploitation and domination.' The guide makes several other suggestions for tutors, including being aware of the controversial nature of the term 'Anglo-Saxon'. It states: 'This was not the term the people then used to refer to themselves' and adds that 'the term has 'a long history of being used in a racially charged manner'. Alfred the Great was referred to as 'Rex Angul-Saxonum', the king of the Anglo-Saxons, in the 10th century. The Brilliant Club has said that it is not a leading expert on decolonising, but encourages tutors to reflect on inclusive and thoughtful teaching practices. Its guidance to tutors is in line with other 'decolonising' work, which seeks to move away from Western accounts of history and science, and away from artistic canons that are seen to privilege the creative work of Western figures. William Shakespeare's birthplace is one of a number of sites to be 'decolonised', and the practice can also include addressing imperial history and ideas of national identity that are seen to be potentially controversial. In 2024, the University of Nottingham removed the term 'Anglo-Saxon' from its leading course over fears that the ethnonym could play into 'nationalist narratives'. In 2023, it emerged that Cambridge taught students that Anglo-Saxons did not exist as a distinct ethnic group, as part of efforts to undermine 'myths of nationalism'. The terminology of 'early medieval England' is the preferred replacement for 'Anglo-Saxon' by academics concerned that the latter has become a phrase surrounding white identity used by racists, principally to describe those in the US descended from white early settlers.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
The Documentary Podcast The Fifth Floor: Russia's 'grey zone' war
Grigor Atanesian from BBC Russian joins us to discuss the theories around 'grey zone' warfare techniques and if, why, and how Russia is deploying them against the UK. Plus, BBC Korean's Yuna Ku explains how companies and celebrities are striving to appear politically neutral before the upcoming South Korean elections; how the Grand Mosque in Mecca has been expanded over the years to accommodate large numbers of pilgrims, with Reem Alsheikh from BBC Arabic; and the story behind a 'lost' masterpiece that recently sold for $1.3m, with Merve Kara-Kaşka from BBC Turkish. Presented by Faranak Amidi Produced by Caroline Ferguson and Alice Gioia (Photo: Faranak Amidi. Credit: Tricia Yourkevich.)