What happens when those meant to protect… step back instead?
That’s the question shaking Kyiv after a deadly street shooting left six people dead and more than a dozen injured.
The fallout has already claimed a major figure: Yevhen Zhukov, head of patrol police, has resigned.
Why? Because videos circulating online appear to show officers fleeing the scene while civilians were under fire.
Interior Minister Igor Klymenko didn’t hold back: “‘Serve and protect’ is not just a slogan.”
The officers involved have been suspended, and an investigation is underway.
Still, he urged caution — two officers, he said, shouldn’t define an entire force.
Crisis Response Questioned
The attack itself was chaotic and terrifying. A gunman opened fire in the Holosiivskyi district, took hostages in a supermarket, and was later killed in a shootout.
Authorities say his mental state was “clearly unstable,” but the motive remains unclear.
President Volodymyr Zelensky called the officers’ actions “inaction.”

Adding that losing lives this way — in the middle of a city — is especially painful during wartime.
So here’s the deeper question: in moments of crisis, what defines duty — and what happens when it falters?
In Kyiv, that debate is just beginning.


