According to the Russian authorities, the suspect had been provided a money reward of $100,000 and a visit to a European nation.
Kirillov was in command of the Russian army’s nuclear, organic and chemical weapons safety forces.
Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) claimed accountability for Kirillov’s assassination, a Ukrainian regulation enforcement official instructed POLITICO Tuesday. A number of hours earlier than the assault, the SBU charged Kirillov in absentia for ordering the large use of banned chemical weapons towards the Ukrainian military on the japanese and southern fronts of the battlefield.
An aide to Kirillov was additionally killed within the blast.