Kyiv Post
‘Now Patrol Police Officers Will Live on Training Grounds’: Kyiv Police Chiefs Sacked After Officers Flee Shooting Scene
Ukraine’s Interior Minister, Ihor Klymenko, said the incident exposed systemic problems in training, discipline, and battlefield readiness, and announced a sweeping overhaul of police preparation. Ma
Ukraine’s Interior Minister, Ihor Klymenko, said the incident exposed systemic problems in training, discipline, and battlefield readiness, and announced a sweeping overhaul of police preparation.
Make us preferred on Google
Share
Facebook
X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Bluesky
Email
Copy
Copied
Ukrainian police officers close a road near the damaged buildings following a large-scale Russian drone and missile attacks in Kyiv on August 28, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Sergei SUPINSKY / AFP)
Content
Share
Facebook
X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Bluesky
Email
Copy
Copied
Flip
Make us preferred on Google
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko has dismissed the entire leadership chain of Kyiv’s patrol police after officers were filmed fleeing a shooting scene in the capital’s Holosiivsky district , in an incident that triggered public outrage and a criminal investigation.
“As for personnel decisions following the findings of the internal investigation, the entire chain of command has now been removed: from platoon commander to the head of the Kyiv Patrol Police Department,” Klymenko told journalists on Tuesday, April 21.
Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official .
A gunman opened fire and took hostage s at a supermarket in a residential district of the Ukrainian capital on Saturday before being killed during an attempted arrest.
In a video published by Ukrainian media, two uniformed police officers wearing yellow vests are seen standing near a person on the ground before running from the scene as gunshots are heard.
Prosecutors have opened a criminal case , and both officers have been formally notified of suspicion over alleged inaction that allowed an armed attacker to continue firing.
Klymenko said the incident exposed systemic problems in training, discipline, and battlefield readiness, and announced a sweeping overhaul of police preparation.
“My requirement is the appointment of deputies for service training in each unit exclusively only of individuals who have gone through combat operations,” he said.
Other Topics of Interest
Large-Scale Multimedia Exhibition on Chornobyl to Open in Kyiv With EU Support
The “Chernobyl. 40 Years On” exhibition will open at the Toronto-Kyiv complex in Kyiv – a multimedia project exploring the 1986 disaster and the future of nuclear energy amid war.
He said patrol officers will now undergo intensive, rotation-based training at military-style facilities.
“Now patrol police officers will live on training grounds in rotation. We will involve military personnel who have combat experience in the 1st and 2nd army corps of the National Guard, as well as from the State Border Guard Service, as instructors,” Klymenko said.
He added that veterans will also be brought into the system.
“And veterans who will be demobilized, who can teach – we will offer them to continue service specifically in the system of training and combat preparation of police officers,” he said.
Klymenko said the changes will initially apply to all patrol units before expanding to district police departments.
He stressed that the reforms are aimed not only at physical preparedness but also psychological resilience under fire.
“We are talking about training and about psychological resilience. Psychological resilience in an extreme situation is not determined by a test, but by the experience of being on a training ground with an instructor,” he said.
Klymenko also confirmed that, under presidential orders, Ukraine will revise police response protocols and training standards.
“By order of the president [Volodymyr Zelensky], response protocols and training programs must be reviewed. We are talking about tactics of action involving weapons and ammunition that may be in the hands of citizens,” he said.
He warned that officers must be ready for extreme scenarios even during routine calls.
“When responding to calls, patrol officers must be ready for the fact that at a minimum, a grenade could be thrown at them,” Klymenko said.
“A police officer should not be afraid when a stun grenade explodes somewhere or a bullet whistles by. Because a police officer is there to risk themselves for the lives of other people,” he added.
The minister said most officers have already undergone rotations in high-risk units in frontline regions. He also said he supports expanding rotations to frontline or near-frontline cities as part of readiness training.
“I would rotate everyone for at least one or two months, if not to the front, then at least to a frontline area. For example, the Kramatorsk Patrol Police Department. Or Pavlohrad, or Synelnykove,” he said.
The incident remains under investigation, with further disciplinary and legal decisions expected.
Alisa is the Head of News and a correspondent at Kyiv Post, where she leads the newsroom’s coverage of breaking events and global developments. With over seven years of experience in TV journalism, Alisa has reported on international and Ukrainian politics, making complex stories easier to understand. Back in September 2022, Alisa joined the Kyiv Post team.