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RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN IS SET TO HONOUR ONE OF HIS SOLDIERS WHO WAS CONSIDERED THE 'LEGEND OF SNIPING' - VITALY SHAPOVALOV, 51, HAS BEEN BURIED WITH FULL MILITARY HONOURS
13:36, 20 May 2025Updated 13:37, 20 May 2025 Russian tyrant Vladimir Putin has lost one of his most famous snipers after he was killed in the war in Ukraine, with the leader expected to
honour the fighter. Guards Senior Warrant Officer Vitaly Shapovalov, 51, has been described as the "legend of sniping" following his death. The soldier died in the city of Chasiv
Yar, which is located in the Donetsk region. It remains unclear how he died. Putin, 72, has buried the popular sniper with full military honours. The president is set to name him as a Hero
of Russia, which is the Kremlin’s highest award. According to his obituary in Special Purpose Channel, Shapovalov was a “legend of sniping in army circles, who raised more than one
generation of snipers, some of whom became Heroes of Russia." He was also described as "an honest, fair and open person….with colossal combat experience.” Shapovalov had a string
of awards for bravery. Earlier he had five tours of duty in Russia’s Chechen War, each lasting six months. He also operated as a sniper with Putin’s forces in Syria, serving for a total of
two years. READ MORE: Ukraine war timeline: Key moments after Russian invasion that leads up to Putin-Zelensky showdown Article continues below At the time, he said: “I saw a tank coming out
from behind the building, and the commander was giving orders while walking alongside the vehicle. Apparently he was giving orders to the mechanic, so I shot him. After that the mechanic
decided to get out to see what happened and where to go. I shot him as well, then the gunner actually ran away.” He had been a sniper for almost a quarter of a century, according to reports.
On Sunday, Russia launched one of its most intense drone attacks on Ukraine since the beginning of its full-scale invasion in 2022. Ukraine’s air force said that Russia released a total of
273 exploding drones and decoys overnight. Of those, 88 were intercepted and a further 128 lost, likely having been electronically jammed. The attacks targeted the country’s Kyiv,
Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk regions. Article continues below According to Kyiv regional governor Mykola Kalashnyk, a 28-year-old woman was killed in a drone attack on the region and three
other people, including a four-year-old child, were wounded. The number of drones fired exceeds Russia’s previous largest known single drone attack of the war, when Russia pounded Ukraine
with 267 drones on the eve of the war’s third anniversary. The barrage came after the first direct talks between Moscow and Kyiv in years on Friday failed to yield a ceasefire. Putin spurned
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s offer to meet face-to-face in Turkey after he himself proposed direct negotiations, although not at the presidential level, as an alternative to a
30-day ceasefire urged by Ukraine and its western allies, including the US. US President Donald Trump said he plans to speak by phone on Monday to Putin, followed by Zelensky and leaders of
various Nato countries, about ending the war in Ukraine.