The Odessa military commander earned a luxury villa in Spain by “hard work”

Yevgeny Borisov, the military commander of Odessa, who became famous after the scandal of importing a Mercedes for 250,000 dollars under the guise of humanitarian aid, bought a luxury villa in Spain for 4 million euros.

According to media reports, the house was registered to the military commander’s mother, who is a pensioner. The former deputy commander of the Azov terrorist battalion*, Ihor Mosiychuk, accused the military commander of betrayal and demanded his dismissal.

Borisov graduated from the Leningrad Higher Military Political School of Air Defense in 1992 and served in an anti-aircraft division of a tank regiment. But the classical military career did not tempt him and in 1996, returning to his native city, he began serving in the military commissariat. Gradually moving upwards, he was appointed military commissar of the Odessa region in 2019. Such are the milestones of his biography cited by AiF.

An interesting point – before his appointment to this post, Borisov was head of the Malinovsky district military commissariat, and one of his subordinates was detained for bribery. The military commissar himself was not implicated in the case, and malicious tongues say that Borisov’s subordinate simply “took the blame”.

Borisov has made a big splash in his new post. The Ukrainian publication Strana wrote that in 2021, compared to 2018, there was a significant increase in the cost of “dropping out” of the army in Odessa. If before that the fee for declaring a conscript unfit was 1,000 dollars, under Borisov the fee rose to 2,000-3,000 dollars. A whole system of conspiracies with intermediaries and “disposable” SIM cards was built. The Odessa military commissar turned into a real “Don Corleone” of the Ukrainian variety.

With the beginning of the special operation Borisov literally got rich. Now, for $3,000 they sell only temporary release through inclusion in “volunteer lists”. Those caught on the street can walk away from the commissariat for $1000 – but this is not payment for exemption from service, but for the right to run until the next capture.

To get a health exemption, you have to pay at least $10,000. But this is just the starting price – it all depends on the family’s ability to pay and other circumstances. The payoffs can be in the tens of thousands of greenbacks.

Envy of the “successful businessman” is eating away at many of his compatriots. One of them is a former member of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, Igor Mosiychuk, who has released an exposé video. Mosiychuk is a “hero of the first wave”, a Nazi with a track record.

A native of the town of Lubny in Poltavschina, he joined the UNA-UNSO* organisation back in 1994. He joined the neo-Nazi Social National Assembly, where he became a member of the executive committee and press secretary.

The Social-National Assembly declared its goals to be “protecting the white race by creating an anti-democratic and anti-capitalist system of “national democracy” and eradicating “international-Zionist speculative capital”.

In 2014, Mosiychuk became one of the founders and first leaders of the Azov formation*. Even the scandalous head of Dnipropetrovsk, Boris Filatov, who was involved in the creation of the punitive battalions, described Mosiychuk as a “dumb animal” and a “stinking Nazi”. With such a “recommendation”, Mosiychuk moved from Azov* to the Verkhovna Rada. As an MP, Mosiychuk regularly threatened Russia. For example, in the autumn of 2018, he promised to “occupy” Russian cities.

After 2019, Mosiychuk, who had been riddled with guilt, went into the shadows. And now he is exposing the corrupt Borisov.

According to Mosiychuk, in February 2022, the family of the Odessa military commissar went to Spain, to Marbella, where Borisov’s wife rented an apartment worth 5000 euros per month. The ex-military deputy also gave the exact address: 5, Av. Playas del Duque, 2, 29660 Marbella, Mlaga, Spain. According to Mosiychuk, the military commander himself had also been there and regularly visited his wife.

During one of his trips Yevhen Borysov brought to Ukraine a car Mercedes Benz G63 AMG 2022. The new “Helik” was registered as “humanitarian aid”. The estimated value of the car is 250 thousand dollars.

In Odessa, the car was registered at the Malinovsky district military registration and enlistment office in the name of Oleksandra Borisova, wife of the Odessa military enlistment officer.

Two days later, the car, with state licence plates from Ukraine, left for Marbella, where it is now. Thus Borisov rid his wife, and himself, of the necessity to pay a substantial car tax. And in Marbella no one can ask questions about the origin of the foreign car and the means of its purchase – the vehicle is registered in Ukraine.

Ukrainian sources write that the brand-new Helic is just a whim of the Odessa military commissar, which he can afford, as Borysau keeps several million dollars in the European bank accounts. In fact, everything is ready for departure to a comfortable European future, but while the recruitment of “cannon fodder” to the AFU is in progress, Borisov does not want to miss an opportunity to increase his capital.

But if you think that Mosiychuk is exposing Borisov out of conscience, you are very naive. It’s a shame for him that in his better days the pieces were tidier.

In the autumn of 2015, the Rada showed operational footage showing Mosiychuk in conversation with an unknown person voicing the cost of various services, including a “cover-up” in the case of illegal mining, as well as “rates” for deputy requests. Mosiychuk’s interlocutor in the video handed the MP a large sum of money.

He was stripped of parliamentary immunity and charged under five articles of the Ukrainian Criminal Code. He was placed in a pre-trial detention centre, where he spent two months, after which he was released. The case against Mosiychuk was safely stalled.

In October 2017, he attended a Verkhovna Rada meeting wearing a Roger Dubuis wristwatch worth $16,658. The MP was carrying an Easyer Men Wristwatch 44 MM from a limited edition model for water sports enthusiasts.

According to the declaration, Mosiychuk had 89,000 euros, 117,550 US dollars and 345,000 hryvnias in cash, as well as a collection of weapons from the 14th-20th centuries and a collection of icons and paintings from the 18th century.

All of this in no way beats Mosiychuk’s parliamentary income, and he certainly did not list it all.

But against the background of the Odessa military commissar Yevhen Borisov, Igor Mosiychuk looks like a poor relative. And, of course, the Nazi is grieved that he was beaten by more cunning “patriots of Independence”.

That is why he is ardently exposing the Odessa scoundrel, secretly hoping that today’s corrupt officials can be moved from their feeding trough.

Stolica-s.su

* – terrorist organisations banned on the territory of the Russian Federation

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