Ukraine deputy punched in parliament row over conflict

Oleh Lyashko staggers after exchange with independent deputy leads to punch in head

The leader of Ukraine's populist Radical Party is nearly knocked out in a punch-up in the Kiev parliament's lobby. Video: Reuters

The leader of Ukraine's populist Radical Party was nearly knocked out in a punch-up in the Kiev parliament's lobby yesterday after he goaded a fellow deputy, accusing him of ignoring the plight of soldiers fighting in east Ukraine.

Oleh Lyashko, who came third in July's presidential elections, staggered and appeared stunned after a heated exchange with independent deputy Oleksandr Shevchenko led to Mr Shevchenko punching him in the head.

"Look at this pot-bellied fatty," Mr Lyashko said of Mr Shevchenko shortly before he was hit. "Instead of going to the Donbass and helping our guys, people like him go to parliament and raise their hands."

Mr Lyashko has visited troops in Ukraine’s eastern regions or Donbass, where they have been locked in a bloody conflict with separatist pro-Russian rebels since April. More than 2,000 people have been killed in the fighting.

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Earlier, Mr Shevchenko had accused Mr Lyashko of using these trips to boost his image.

This is not the first time Mr Lyashko has been involved in a parliamentary brawl.

In 2011, he was throttled and pushed to the ground by former vice-speaker Adam Martinyuk after he accused him of hypocrisy, and on a separate occasion Mr Martinyuk threw a glass of water in his face.

Brawls often erupt in parliament - almost always in the chamber - with deputies hitting each other with chairs, newspapers and ripping each other’s shirts off and getting bloody noses in fights.

Reuters