Olga Kursa Kachura Wiki

                                    Olga Kursa Kachura Biography

Who was Olga Kursa Kachura?

Lieutenant Colonel Olga ‘Kursa’ Kachura, 52, died instantly after a Ukrainian missile hit her car while she was driving in the town of Horlivka in the Donetsk region of Ukraine.

A Russian commander who bragged that she enjoyed killing Ukrainians and whose troops fired on civilians in the Donbas region was killed in a missile attack.


Kachura, who is the first female Russian officer to die in the war in Ukraine, was a colonel in a rocket artillery division shelling civilians in the Donetsk People’s Republic.

Her unit fired on civilians in the Donbass region, and Kachura later boasted that she enjoyed killing Ukrainians in interviews on Kremlin propaganda channels.


Kachura, a Ukrainian native who worked in the Horlivka police department, allegedly defected to the pro-Russian side in 2014 after Putin fomented a rebel uprising in the Donbas.

She often disguised herself as a member of the Ukrainian regular forces to commit war crimes in order to discredit them, according to the Ukrainian military.

“(Kachura was) guilty of the shelling of Donbas cities and the death of civilians,” said Ukrainian journalist Denis Kazanskyi. “In Ukraine, she was sentenced to 12 years in prison in absentia.”

Career


Kachura was a career police investigator who rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel before joining the forces of the Putin-backed separatists.

He served in the 3rd Berkut Separate Motorized Rifle Brigade of the DPR 1st Army Corps and commanded a Grad MLRS division in Horlivka. There were 140 gunners under his command.

The mother of two children had been injured several times in previous attacks. He had the rank of colonel in the DPR forces since 2015.

Ukraine last year sentenced Kachura to 12 years in prison in absentia with asset confiscation for “participation in a terrorist group or organization.” It is believed that he ordered the bombing of cities in Donbas that resulted in civilian deaths.

She was the director of the Horlivka weightlifting federation and an honorary citizen of the city, twinned with Barnsley in England.

Horlivka Mayor Ivan Prikhodko said: ‘A brave and wise woman who was there since the beginning of the DPR People’s Militia has tragically died.

‘Olga Kachura, victorious and unwavering Korsa.’

Kochura’s death comes after the first Russian soldier killed in Ukraine was buried last month.

Family


Corporal Anastasia Savitskaya, 35, a married mother of two who is said to be a “true heroine”, was buried on July 13 in her native Volgograd, a city in southwestern Russia.

“The deceased became the first servicewoman to die during the special military operation,” said Alexander Strukov, a local veterans leader.

A friend of Savitskaya said: “She had dreamed of serving in the army since childhood and signed a contract at the age of 18.” Going to war in Ukraine “was her choice,” they said.

Her grieving husband, an unnamed ex-soldier, said at her funeral: ‘How am I going to live now? Why did I let you go there? Loved, beautiful, best.

Unlike some Western countries, it is still rare for Russian military women to go to war. Ukraine, for example, has seen several female soldiers join the fight.

A eulogy at the woman’s funeral read: “A warrior woman has always been an exception to the rule. But Anastasia, having mastered the ‘home’ front, fearlessly headed into a dangerous special operation, achieving a double feat.’

Meanwhile, Putin also lost two more colonels in his Russian forces this week, the latest proof of the devastating toll his senior ranks have suffered.

Paratrooper Lieutenant Colonel Ivan Pozdeev served in the Kutuzov Airborne Assault Brigade in Ulyanovsk.

The acting head of the Komi Republic, Vladimir Uyba, said that he “died a hero during the special warfare operation in Ukraine.”

Russia has tried to hide the number of high-ranking deaths in Ukraine.

It also came to light that Lieutenant Colonel Denis Sorokin, a married father of two, was killed near Melitopol early in the war.

He was commander of an assault battalion, also posthumously awarded the Hero of Russia.

A dozen generals have died in the war.

Source: https://wikisoon.com/