He's referring to the Kyiv-appointed governor of the fraught Donetsk region, Serhiy Taruta.
A small group of Soviet veterans of the Afghan war are protesting in Bryansk against Russia's actions in Ukraine, RFE/RL's Moldova Service reports (in Romanian).
And on a related note, correspondent Daisy Sindelar notes in this piece that while Europeans have protested, it generally hasn't been over Russia's actions with respect to Ukraine:
In Europe, Plenty Of Outrage -- Just Not About Russia's Actions In Ukraine
The Azov battalion claims via Facebook that pro-Russian forces "massively mined" the area around the village of Shirokino before retreating. The PfM1 mines "look like a toy and make you want to pick them up," the pro-Ukrainian volunteer force warns.
The abducted pro-Kyivan mayor of Krasnyi Lyman, Leonid Perebyynis, and an aide have turned up in a Kyiv clinic, according to Perebyynis's daughter via Ukrinform. They are "in serious condition" but the details are still sketchy.
A Russian Foreign Ministry reaction to the stepped-up EU sanctions targeting Moscow's actions in Ukraine. Moscow says that the timing of the move, just as the contact group was reaching a cease-fire deal in Minsk, suggests that "the European Union has demonstrated that its leadership is still wandering in the political 'Looking Glass' and actually sends a signal of direct support for the 'party of war' in Kyiv that it is not satisfied with the results of the meeting in Minsk."
Resources would be better utilized on Donbas recovery, the Russian Foreign Ministry adds.
"As for the new list of sanctions by the EU, if they are accepted, a reaction from our side will of course follow," it concludes.