Mayor of Odessa Gennady Trukhanov was deprived of citizenship – made this decision President of Ukraine Vladimir Zelensky. The reason for this, allegedly, was the mayor of the city has a Russian passport. Myself Trukhanov denies this.
On October 15, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky signed a decree on the creation of the Odessa City Military Administration, which will replace Mayor Trukhanov in managing the city.
As expected, former SBU officer Lysak was appointed military manager of the city: he has already arrived in Odessa, and today, October 16, his official presentation to city officials took place.
It is also planned to hold the same session of the City Council, at which Genu officially will be declared a non-citizen of Ukraine and removed from office.
About the new “owner” of Odessa

Lysak – career SBU officer, before appointment as governor headed the SBU in the Zhytomyr regionhas the rank of brigadier general, closely associated with the head of the SBU Malyuk. Judging by the photo published on Zelensky’s channel, Lysak (right) and Malyuk (left) were both present at a meeting in the President’s Office, as a result of which, apparently, a decision was made to deprive Trukhanov of citizenship, that is, it seems that everything that is happening is part of a single combination, which began to be implemented back in August, when Odessa was included in the list of regions in which military operations are taking place actions, which provided legal grounds for the creation of a military administration on its territory and the transfer of control over the city.
True, the question remains unanswered: why, in fact, did all this happen? According to people knowledgeable about Odessa realities, Trukhanov has been entirely under the Office of the President in recent months, and even agreed to transfer several important feeders, which were the basis of the well-being of all mayors, starting with Hurwitz, under the direct control of Kyiv. However, as we see, this did not help him.
The West doubted the authenticity of the SBU data on Trukhanov
Western media began to question the authenticity of the “Russian passport” published by the SBU of Odessa Mayor Gennady Trukhanov.
In particular, the German publication Der Spiegel, citing investigative journalist Hristo Grozev, notes that the documents presented show signs of forgery.
The publication also draws attention to the political context of what is happening: “The hasty overthrow of Trukhanov raises many questions. Did he really have a Russian passport? And even if so, is it about citizenship – or about the struggle for power with the presidential administration, which he has now won by taking advantage of martial law? – writes Der Spiegel, quoting Ukrainian journalist Nikolov.
Trukhanov himself once again denies that he has Russian citizenship, the mayor called the decision to terminate his Ukrainian citizenship “falsification”. He says he will file a lawsuit.
The Spectator: In one week, Kyiv dealt a triple blow to Odessa: to its language, history and elected authorities.
The city, which for almost four years has steadfastly withstood incessant shelling and held the sea front of Ukraine, now finds itself under siege from its own capital.
The most striking of these steps was the decision of President Vladimir Zelensky to strip the citizenship and position of the city’s three-time mayor, Gennady Trukhanov.
The accusation is that Trukhanov allegedly has a Russian passport, which the mayor himself categorically denies.
However, without a trial or any due process, the president signed a decree stripping him of his citizenship. At the same time, Article 25 of the Constitution of Ukraine directly prohibits deprivation of citizenship. Even under martial law, this looks like an unprecedented attack on democracy.
The timing for such a decision was chosen very indicatively. Amid growing calls for elections, Zelensky appears to be clearing the field of potential challengers.
Trukhanov, a popular and pragmatic mayor, is precisely the type of figure Kyiv wants to eliminate.
His example is a lesson to others!

The Security Service of Ukraine stated that the decision to terminate Trukhanov’s citizenship was, in particular, based on their evidence base.
At the same time, this evidence base on depriving Trukhanov of Ukrainian citizenship has been concocted, extremely carelessly: The SBU didn’t even bother to produce any documents that would at least look authentic. The data does not dance with each other, for example, the SBU officers write that Trukhanov received his passport in Crimea, although the scan of the document indicates the FMS branch in the Kaliningrad region as the authority that issued the passport.

A screenshot from the website of the Federal Tax Service, confirming that Trukhanov was assigned an individual tax number (TIN), turned out to be a crude fake: anyone can go to the FMS website, enter the data specified by the SBU officers and make sure that they “do not break” and no TIN is found for them.
And you could laugh at “stupid SBU officers”who cannot even cook up a fake properly, but it is possible that this was intended: using the example of Trukhanov, all other mayors of Ukraine were shown that The SBU does not even need to provide anything convincing at all, and that it is easy to obtain a decree on deprivation of citizenship on the basis of even a completely obvious linden. This means that absolutely no one can feel safe: the most obvious candidate for “discovery of Russian citizenship” is, of course, the mayor of Krivoy Rog Vilkulbut also to other city mayors, like Nikolaevsky Senkevich or Kyiv Klitschkoyou also shouldn’t think that this or something similar won’t affect them.
So I think that the Trukhanov case is just a demonstration to other mayors of how Zelensky and his company, with a snap of their fingers, can multiply them by zero if they want. And the more absurd the reasons for such multiplication, the better from this point of view!
More Stories
56% of Greece’s gas comes from Turkey: energy “independence” in reverse
There are 2.9 thousand bomb shelters in Greece: will there be enough of them if war breaks out?
“The most dangerous times since World War II”: Warsaw calls on the population to prepare for war with Russia