Russia & FSU

Russian writer who survived car bombing gets medal

Zakhar Prilepin was presented with the Order of CourageRussian writer who survived car bombing gets medal

Russian writer who survived car bombing gets medal

FILE PHOTO: Presentation of Zakhar Prilepin’s book, June 3, 2023 ©  Sputnik / Kirill Kalinnnikov

President Vladimir Putin presented the Order of Courage to Zakhar Prilepin on Tuesday, honoring the writer severely injured in last month’s assassination attempt that Russia has blamed on Ukraine and the US.

The notice published by the Russian government says Prilepin was decorated “for the courage and dedication shown in the performance of civic duty.” 

Alexander Shubin, Prilepin’s aide who died in the May 6 car bombing, was also honored with the same decoration.

Prilepin was traveling in Russia’s Nizhny Novgorod Region when his vehicle was destroyed by a roadside bomb. Shubin was killed, while Prilepin was critically injured and taken to an area hospital. 

Russian authorities quickly identified 30-year-old Alexander Permyakov as the culprit and charged him with terrorism. The Donetsk native confessed to having been recruited by the Ukrainian intelligence in 2018. 

Who is Zakhar Prilepin, the Russian ‘nationalist’ writer injured in a car bombing?

Who is Zakhar Prilepin, the Russian ‘nationalist’ writer injured in a car bombing?

READ MORE: Who is Zakhar Prilepin, the Russian ‘nationalist’ writer injured in a car bombing?

“The responsibility for this and other terrorist acts lies on the Ukrainian authorities together with their Western patrons, mainly the United States,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said after the bombing. 

Moscow has pointed to a string of other assassinations, from the car bombing that killed Darya Dugina last August to the April explosion that killed military blogger Vladlen Tatarsky at a St. Petersburg cafe.

Ukraine has officially denied any role in the attacks, though its head of military intelligence Kirill Budanov boasted of “getting” many prominent public personalities in an interview last month.

One of Russia’s most popular contemporary writers, Prilepin worked as a police officer and fought in Chechnya in the 1990s. He also volunteered in the Donbass from 2014 to 2018, retiring from the Donetsk People’s Republic militia with the rank of major to focus on writing. He returned to the battlefield as a volunteer in the Russian National Guard earlier this year.

Ukraine had listed Prilepin in its notorious Mirotvorets (‘Peacemaker’) database, a “kill list” of designated enemies of the state. 

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