Vladimir Zhitarenko
Colonel Vladimir Zhitarenko (Russian: Владимир Житаренко; June 15, 1942 – January 1, 1995) was a military correspondent for the Russian armed forces daily Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star).
Zhitarenko had covered post-Soviet conflicts in Afghanistan, Abkhazia, Chechnya, South Ossetia, Tajikistan and the Transdnester, as well as the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl.
On December 31, 1994, Zhitarenko was hit by two sniper bullets, including in the head, as he stepped out of an armored personnel carrier on a front line outside the town of Tolstoy-Yurt, near the Chechen capital of Grozny.[1] He died the next day, as the second journalist to die covering the First Chechen War (after Cynthia Elbaum, an American photographer killed during an air raid on Grozny on December 22, 1994).
References
- ^ Russian Military Journalist Is Killed, The New York Times, January 3, 1995
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- 1942 births
- 1995 deaths
- Deaths by firearm in Russia
- Journalists killed while covering the Chechen wars
- Russian war correspondents
- Russian military personnel killed in action
- War correspondents of the Chechen wars