Serhiy Kulchytsky

Serhiy Petrovych Kulchytsky (Ukrainian: Сергій Петрович Кульчицький; 17 December 1963 – 29 May 2014) was head of the military and special training directorate at the National Guard of Ukraine. Gen Kulchytsky was killed during the Siege of Sloviansk, when his helicopter was downed by armed pro-Russian separatists.

Serhiy Kulchytskiy
Native name
Сергій Петрович Кульчицький
Birth nameSerhiy Petrovich Kulchytskiy
Born(1963-12-17)17 December 1963
Weimar, Thuringia, East Germany (now Germany)
Died29 May 2014(2014-05-29) (aged 50)
Sloviansk, Donetsk Oblast/Donetsk People's Republic, Ukraine
Allegiance
Service/branch Ukrainian National Guard
RankMajor general
Commands heldWestern Territorial Command of Internal Troops (deputy commander)
Battles/wars
AwardsHero of Ukraine Order of the Gold Star (Posthumous)

Military career

Serhiy Kulchytsky had a military upbringing. His father served with Soviet forces stationed in East Germany. Kulchytsky graduated from the Ussuriysk military college in the Soviet Far East in 1981. He went on to train at the Far Eastern Higher Military Command School in the city of Blagoveshchensk, attaining a distinction in 1985. His military career began with the role of marine platoon commander at the Soviet Northern Fleet, based in Murmansk. Kulchytsky served in the Soviet Northern Fleet until the dissolution of the Union. Once Ukraine became an independent state, Kulchytsky moved to western Ukraine and became deputy commander of a National Guard battalion in Ternopil in 1992. Moving up the ranks, he became the battalion's commander in 1994. In 2010 he was appointed deputy commander of the Western Command of the Ukrainian Interior Ministry's troops by President Viktor Yanukovych.[1]

Death

Kulchytsky was travelling with soldiers to the Mount Karachun base near Sloviansk when their MI-8 helicopter was shot down by pro-Russian separatists armed with anti-aircraft weapons. The Major-General, six other National Guardsmen, and six special forces of the Interior Ministry were all killed. At the time, he was the highest-ranking officer to be killed in action.[2]

Funeral

Kulchytsky's funeral procession took place on 31 May, in the western city of Lviv at the Lychakiv Cemetery.[3]

Legacy

Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko congratulated the 27th Brigade of the National Guard with the title of the "Serhiy Kulchytsky Battalion", after Kulchytsky.[3]

Personal life

Kulchytsky was married with a son.[1]

References

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