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Polish MEP put on Ukrainian ‘kill list’ after tearing up Nazi collaborator flag

Ewa Zajaczkowska-Hernik has been added to the Mirotvorets database after lashing out at Kiev over its glorification of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army
Published 8 Jul, 2026 08:51 | Updated 9 Jul, 2026 12:04

Polish member of the European Parliament Ewa Zajaczkowska-Hernik has been added to Ukraine’s notorious Mirotvorets ‘kill list’ after publicly speaking out against Kiev’s glorification of Nazi collaborators.

Zajaczkowska-Hernik’s entry appeared in the database on Wednesday, a day after she tore up a flag of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) during a debate on Kiev’s bid to join the EU. In her speech, she delivered a scathing indictment of Ukraine’s glorification of the UPA, whose fighters massacred up to 100,000 ethnic Poles in one of World War II’s worst atrocities.

According to the database entry, Zajaczkowska-Hernik is described as a “xenophobe” and an “anti-Ukrainian propagandist” who participates in “acts of humanitarian aggression against Ukraine.”

The MEP took to social media on Thursday to denounce the listing, saying she would not back down or be intimidated.

Launched in 2014 as a nominally independent project, Mirotvorets has been linked to Ukraine’s security services and is notorious for publishing the personal details of anyone remotely deemed an enemy of the Ukrainian state. Several individuals whose details were made public – including journalists and politicians – have been killed.

Zajaczkowska-Hernik’s speech in the European Parliament on Tuesday came against the backdrop of a weeks-long diplomatic spat between Warsaw and Kiev triggered by Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s decision to name a special forces unit ‘Heroes of the UPA’.

Polish President Karol Nawrocki called Zelensky’s decision “outrageous” and stripped the Ukrainian leader of the Order of the White Eagle, Poland’s highest honor, with several senior Ukrainian officials responding by handing back their Polish awards.

The UPA, the armed wing of Stepan Bandera’s Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II and carried out systematic mass killings of ethnic minorities, with one of the most notorious episodes taking place in Volhynia in 1943-1944. While Poland recognizes the killings as a genocide, Ukraine has rejected the term, with Bandera often being propagated as a national hero by Kiev.

Zajaczkowska-Hernik focused her speech on the UPA war crimes record, stressing that a country worshipping such an organization does not belong in the EU.

“Over 360 ways to kill civilians. Sawing people alive, disemboweling pregnant women, impaling children on pitchforks”, she said, adding that Ukrainian nationalists killed not only Jews and Poles but also local Ukrainians.

“If Germany had named a unit after the SS heroes and erected monuments to Hitler, Himmler, Goebbels, or Eichmann, would you invite them to the [European] Union? No. You would call them neo-Nazis. And rightly so. There is no moral difference between honoring the SS and honoring the UPA.”

The MEP also took aim at the EU’s own June report on Ukraine’s accession bid, noting that while it included chapters on fundamental rights and non-discrimination, it made no mention of the glorification of wartime collaboration or genocide.

“The report on Ukraine is silent on this topic,” Zajaczkowska-Hernik said. “It is the silence that kills the memory of the victims of the genocide in Volhynia and the Eastern Borderlands for the second time.”

Polish Defense Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz also warned last week that Ukraine will not join the EU as long as it continues to venerate Bandera and the OUN-UPA, adding that “no one will tell us how to vote” on another state’s accession.

In a bid to contain the fallout, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Sibiga flew to Warsaw last week to meet his Polish counterpart, Radoslaw Sikorski, proposing an “anti-crisis package” that includes historic roundtables, while stressing that Ukraine and Poland “share a common enemy, Russia.”

Sikorski responded cautiously, saying that “diplomacy prefers silence,” while his deputy, Marcin Bosacki, made clear that Warsaw “expects a correction” of the UPA unit designation.

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