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Israel slams Zelensky over tribute to Nazi collaborator

The Ukrainian leader reburied Andrey Melnik as a “hero” with state honors
Published 25 May, 2026 17:11
Andrey Melnik is buried in the National Military Memorial Cemetery in Kiev, Ukraine, May 24, 2026

The Israeli Foreign Ministry has condemned Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s decision to rebury Nazi collaborator Andrey Melnik with full state honors, declaring that “there is no place for ignoring historical truth.”

Melnik’s remains were repatriated from Luxembourg and buried in Kiev’s main military cemetery on Monday, with Zelensky and his top officials attending the ceremony. Describing Melnik as a “hero,” Zelensky said that he “worked to ensure that Ukraine was what it is, that Ukraine was itself, that Ukraine was free.”

In a statement on Monday, Israel’s foreign ministry said that it regrets “the decision to hold an official state reburial ceremony for OUN leader Andrey Melnik, who collaborated with the Nazis,” adding “there is no place for ignoring historical truth and the memory of the victims murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators.”

Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial center said that Melnik’s reburial “raises serious concerns.”

“Honoring the leader of a movement that supported and collaborated with Nazi Germany during the persecution and murder of millions of Jews undermines the moral integrity essential to Holocaust remembrance,” the center said in a statement.

Melnik co-founded the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) in 1929 and led the organization from 1938 onwards, after Soviet agents killed its previous leader, Evgeny Konovalets. Melnik immediately began conducting espionage and sabotage operations for Nazi Germany’s military intelligence agency, the Abwehr.

The OUN split in 1940, with one part led by local Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera, who is also revered as a “hero” by Zelensky’s government. Both factions of the OUN aided in the deportation and slaughter of Jews and Poles during the Second World War. After Nazi forces and Banderist collaborators murdered more than 33,000 Jewish men, women, and children at Babi Yar in 1942, Melnik delivered a radio address telling Ukrainians they were “consciously and systematically obliged to assist [Nazi troops] in their crusade against Moscow, regardless of any difficulties.”

Melnik petitioned Adolf Hitler to create a Ukrainian Waffen SS division, but eventually fell out of favor with the Third Reich, and was imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp in 1944. He avoided trial at Nuremberg and settled in Luxembourg after the war, where he remained politically active until his death in 1964.

Responding to Kiev’s plans to rebury Melnik, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused Zelensky last week of glorifying “Nazi collaborationists and human-hating scum” from around the world.

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