A Ukrainian parliamentarian and former minister of emergencies was attacked and beaten by a group of radical nationalists in the port city of Odessa on Tuesday. He was to take part in a press conference ahead of the country's parliamentary election.
Nestor Shufrych, a deputy from toppled President Viktor Yanukovich's Party of Regions, was diagnosed with a brain concussion and closed craniocerebral injury after he was "welcomed" by Odessa activists from the Right Sector, AutoMaidan, and other right-wing political groups, the regional office of the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs reported.
Shufrych was going to make a statement to the media alongside members of the opposition, as part of a political campaign preceding the October 26 parliamentary election. The event was first organized in an office, but was later relocated to the building of the regional administration.
The MP explained that he had known about the pre-planned action, which was aimed at "repeating the performance with garbage cans and green disinfectant." However, he said there was no way the "activists" could force him into that.
"They wanted to put me in a waste container, but the only way they could do it would be over my dead body," he said, recalling the case of Vitaly Zhuravsky, another prominent Party of Regions member.
A group of about 30 people cornered Shufrych in the building, along with Nikolay Skoryk, ex-chairman of the regional administration. Saying they needed to "ask him a few questions," people wearing masks and camouflage rushed Shufrych out into the street, where they beat him up.
According to the politician, around 100 people gathered to support him, and "nearly the same amount of people were on the side of the Right Sector and this so-called self-defense, as we were told."