The Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence (Ukrainian: Українська Національна Асамблея-Українська Народна Самооборона, УНА-УНСО, UNA-UNSO) was a Ukrainian nationalist organisation. It was composed by a political wing (the Ukrainian National Assembly – UNA) and a paramilitary wing (Ukrainian People's Self-Defence – UNSO).
Ukrainian National Assembly Українська Національна Асамблея | |
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Founded | 3/4 November 1990 |
Dissolved | 22 May 2014 (political wing only) |
Merged into | Right Sector (political wing only) |
Headquarters | Kyiv |
Paramilitary Wing | Ukrainian National Self Defense |
Membership (2006) | 8,000 |
Ideology | Ukrainian nationalism Ukrainian irredentism Pan-Slavism Anti-communism |
Political position | Far-right |
Colours | Red, black |
Slogan | "Glory to the Nation, death to the enemies!" |
Anthem | Stay, my love, don't cry, honey |
Party flag | |
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Website | |
unso | |
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Ukrainian National Self-Defense (UNSO) | |
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Українська національна самооборона (УНСО) (Ukrainian) | |
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Dates of operation | 1994–present |
Group(s) | "Argo" "Viking" |
Active regions | Ukraine |
Ideology |
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Part of | UNA-UNSO (until 22 May 2014) Ukrainian territorial defence battalions (2022-present) |
Allies | |
Opponents | ![]() |
Battles and wars | 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt Transnistria War War in Abkhazia (1992–1993) First Karabakh War First Chechen War Yugoslav Wars Euromaidan Russo-Ukrainian War
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Identification symbol | ![]() |
According to Andreas Umland and Anton Shekhovtsov, the UNA-UNSO was created in 1991 as a "formation manned by UNA members who had served in the Soviet armed forces ... to confront the State Committee on the State of Emergency". The UNA-UNSO has been described by International-security expert Andrew McGregor as a "influential but fringe movement", which deeply influenced far-right politics in Ukraine due its visibility and militancy, although it still had small numbers. Although the Ukrainian National Assembly (Ukrainian: УНА, UNA) was the organisation's political wing, on 22 May 2014 it merged with Right Sector; the UNSO continues to operate independently.
The UNSO has participated in multiple international conflicts by sending volunteers to support various belligerents. Including the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, Transnistria War, the War in Abkhazia, First Chechen War, the Yugoslav Wars and the Russo-Ukrainian War.
History
Early years
The UNA was created on 30 June 1990 in Lviv as the Ukrainian Interparty Assembly (UMA). On 3–4 November 1990, a congress of the Ukrainian National Association (UNS) was held in Kyiv. On 11 January 1991, UNS squads headed by Yuriy Tyma guarded the Seimas Palace during the January Events in Lithuania. On 30 June 1991, about 200 UNS members held a torchlight parade in Lviv commemorating the 1941 declaration of Ukrainian independence.
During the first days of the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt, a UNS squad led by Vietnam War veteran Valeriy Bobrovych left for Moscow; the squad later laid the foundations for the Argo battalion. On 19 August 1991, during the struggle against the State Committee on the State of Emergency, the UNS created squads of the Ukrainian People's Self-Defense (UNSO) in Kyiv. The squads were formed around a small group of ethnic-Ukrainian Soviet army veterans of the war in Afghanistan. In December 1990 Yuriy Shukhevych, the son of Roman Shukhevych, was elected as the first leader of the UNS. Because of the 8 September 1991 Declaration of Independence of Ukraine, the sixth session of the UMA was renamed the Ukrainian National Assembly; it became known as the UNA-UNSO, due to the UNSO's close association with the UNA.
Since its 1991 independence, Ukraine has had separatist movements aiming to reunite portions of Ukraine with Russia and other neighbouring countries. UNA-UNSO stopped People's Deputy Goncharov of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union from reestablishing the Donetsk–Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic and the Donetsk National Guard in the Donbas. In Kyiv, the Patriotic Forum (Otyechestvyennyi forum) was abolished. In November 1991 the UNSO held a rally, and due to a brawl involving UNSO fighters the government made the first mass arrests of UNSO activists. In Odesa UNSO halted an initiative to create a Novorossiysk Republic, influencing separatist movements in Bukovina and Zakarpattia. On 7 June 1992, an UNSO group from Lviv broke up a Romanian congress in Chernivtsi which advocated the unification of northern Bukovina and Romania. In early 1993, the UNSO had a reported 4,000 members.
Since 1994

The UNA was registered as a political party in December 1994, and in the 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election three UNA-UNSO members were elected as deputies to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian parliament). In September 1995, its registration was suspended until 1997.
UNSO was registered as a public organization in Lviv, Ternopil, Rivne and Poltava Oblasts only. In practise, however, there was no distinction between the membership of both organizations.
From 1994 to 1997, UNA-UNSO members became prominent in Ukraine through a number of anti-Russian activities. UNA-UNSO deputies destroyed a Russian flag in the Verkhovna Rada, UNA-UNSO fighters joined Chechen rebels in the First Chechen War and activists organised demonstrations against Russian pop singers visiting Ukraine. UNA-UNSO took sides in Ukrainian church affairs and clashed with police during the July 1995 funeral of Patriarch Volodomyr, head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate. The organisations supported Patriarch Filaret Denysenko, who was excommunicated by the Russian Orthodox Church, and participated in violent attempts to seize property for the new church (particularly in Rivne and Volyn Oblasts)[citation needed]. Membership peaked at around 10,000 members, about 90 percent of whom were between 18 and 35 years old. The organisation was depicted in Georgiy Gongadze's 1994 documentary film, Shadows of War.[citation needed]
In 1997, the government of Leonid Kuchma banned the Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian National Self Defence. UNA-UNSO members responded with violent street protests, resulting in over 250 arrests. Dmytro Korchynsky, one of those arrested, soon left the organisation.
In 1998, UNA-UNSO's new leaders were Andriy Shkil and Yuriy Shukhevych, the son of Ukrainian nationalist Roman Shukhevych. In the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election, the organisation received 0.39 percent of the vote.
Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian Nationalistic Self Defense members participated in the 2000–01 Ukraine without Kuchma protest campaign. In the 2002 parliamentary elections Andriy Shkil won an electoral district in Lviv Oblast and a seat in the Verkhovna Rada, the party itself won 0.04% of the votes. In 2003 Shkil left the party, and he has become an aide to Yulia Tymoshenko. During the Orange Revolution UNA-UNSO members supported Viktor Yushchenko against his pro-Russian opponents, providing security for Yushchenko supporters and Orange leaders such as Yulia Tymoshenko in Kyiv's Independence Square.
Six Ukrainians fought on the side of Yugoslavia in the Battle of Koshare. The commander of the volunteers was , and he was also the one who led the volunteers into war.

In 2005, Yuriy Shukhevych again became the party's leader. In the 2006 parliamentary election, it failed to win parliamentary representation with 0.06 percent of the vote and did not participate in the 2007 election.
In 2008, South Ossetian attorney general Teimuraz Khugayev accused UNA-UNSO of joining a Georgian unit during the August war, but no evidence has been provided. According to an August 2009 Russian Investigative Committee report, 200 UNA-UNSO members and soldiers from the Ukrainian Ground Forces aided Georgia during the fighting. Ukraine denied the accusation. UNA-UNSO deputy head Mykola Karpyuk said that "unfortunately", no organisation members took part in the Georgian conflict.[citation needed]
UNA-UNSO participated in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election, receiving 0.08 percent of the national vote and winning none of the five electoral districts in which they fielded candidates.) and thus failed to win parliamentary representation. In March 2014, Russia brought a criminal case against the party and some of its members, including party leader Oleh Tyahnybok of Svoboda, for "organizing an armed gang" which allegedly fought the Russian 76th Guards Air Assault Division during the first Chechen war. The organisation's Ukrainian National Assembly political wing merged with Right Sector on 22 May 2014.
Leaders
- 1990–1994 Yuriy Shukhevych
- 1994–1999 Oleh Vitovych
- 2002–? Andriy Shkil
- 2005–? Yuriy Shukhevych
- 2015–2016
- 2016–? Valeriy Bobrovych
International conflicts
- 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt in Moscow (summer 1991)
- Transnistria War in Moldova (spring–summer 1992)
- War in Abkhazia (1992–93)
- Georgian Civil War (1991-93)
- Croatian War of Independence (1991-95)
- Bosnian War (1992-95)
- First Karabakh war (1988–94)
- First Chechen War in Russia (1995–96)
- Kosovo War in Yugoslavia (1998–99)
- Russo-Ukrainian War (2014–present)
Transnistria

During the Transnistria War, UNA-UNSO members fought with Transnistrian separatists against Moldovan government forces, purportedly in defence of Transnistria's large ethnic Ukrainian minority. Over 50 UNSO members were awarded the Defender of Transnistria Order.
Georgian civil war
In 1993, UNA-UNSO sent volunteers to the Abkhaz–Georgian conflict against Abkhaz separatists. The UNA-UNSO Argo unit joined the Georgian side against Russian-backed Abkhaz forces, and some volunteers joined the Sokhumi Battalion of the Marine Infantry Forces of Georgia. A CPT Ustym squad prevented an amphibious assault of Russian forces near Sokhumi, sinking a Russian military motorboat. Seven UNSO members died near Sokhumi, and 30 members received the Order of Vakhtang Gorgasali medal. The UNA-UNSO units did not lose a battle in the civil war.
- Sokhumi raid (June 1993)
- Starushkino village ambush (15 July 1993)
- Shromi village assault (17 July 1993)
- Khomi defence (4 October 1993)
- Samtredia defence (17 October 1993)
Russo-Ukrainian War

UNSO had also fought in the Russo-Ukrainian War as part of the Ukrainian Volunteer Corps and the Territorial defence battalions 131st Separate Reconnaissance Battalion "UNSO", 1st Recon Company UNSO and 55th UNSO Battalion.[citation needed] It also fought in the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Ideology and image
The Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence 1994 party platform envisioned Kyiv as the centre of a new, pan-Slavic, eastern military bloc. International-security expert Andrew McGregor said in 2006 that the UNA-UNSO "might be best characterized as an influential fringe movement" and "its high visibility belies its limited numbers." Its anthem is "Stay, my love, don't cry, honey", a reprise of "Bella ciao".
Elections
Parliamentary, since 1994 (year links to election page) | ||||||||
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Year | Votes | % | Mandate | |||||
1994 | 148,239 | 0.5 | 1 | |||||
1998 | 105,977 | 0.39 | 0 | |||||
2002 | 11,839 | 0.04 | 0 (1) | |||||
2006 | 16,397 | 0.06 | 0 | |||||
2007 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
2012 | 16,913 | 0.08 | 0 |
UNA-UNSO parliamentarians
- Andriy Shkil
See also
- Category:Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence politicians
- St Volodymyr's Cathedral ownership controversy
- Tetiana Chornovol
References
- Right Sector registered as official party, Interfax-Ukraine (22 May 2014)
- McGregor, Andrew (30 March 2006), Radical Ukrainian Nationalism and the War in Chechnya, The Jamestown Foundation
- The radical right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 by Sabrina Ramet, Pennsylvania University Press. 1999 ISBN 0-271-01810-0 (page 290 and continuing from there)
- Wilson, Andrew (2005), Ukraine's Orange Revolution, Yale University Press, p. x
- Ramet, Sabrina P. (1998), Nihil Obstat: Religion, Politics, and Social Change in East-Central Europe and Russia, Duke University Press, p. 257
- "Украинские националисты УНАО-УНСО признали, что воевали на стороне Азербайджана в Карабахе". panorama.am (in Russian). 17 September 2010. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017.
- ""В случае войны мы окажем Баку посильную помощь"". euraspravda.ru (in Russian). 5 March 2014.
- ""В случае войны мы окажем Баку посильную помощь"". Minval.az (in Russian).
- ""Украинские националисты собираются в Грузию воевать против России"". 24 April 2008.
- "Radical Ukrainian Nationalism and the War in Chechnya". Jamestown.
- ""Краще згинути вовком, нiж жити псом"".
- "Refworld | Ukraine: Ideology, goals, organization and activities of the Ukrainian Nationalist Assembly – Ukrainian Nationalist Self-Defense Organization (UNA-UNSO); treatment of UNA-UNSO members by the authorities (January 1999 – August 2004)".
- Singh, Anita Inder (2001), Democracy, Ethnic Diversity, and Security in Post-Communist Europe, Greenwood, p. 114
- Dymerskaya-Tsigelman, Liudmila; Finberg, Leonid (1999), "Antisemitism of the Ukrainian Radical Nationalists: Ideology and Policy", Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism (14), Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism
- Umland, Andreas; Shekhovtsov, Anton (September–October 2013). "Ultraright Party Politics in Post-Soviet Ukraine and the Puzzle of the Electoral Marginalism of Ukrainian Ultranationalists in 1994–2009". Russian Politics and Law. 51 (5): 33–58. doi:10.2753/RUP1061-1940510502. S2CID 144502924.
- LLC, Helix Consulting. "Украинские националисты УНАО-УНСО признали, что воевали на стороне Азербайджана в Карабахе". panorama.am. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- "Украина.Ru | Украинская национальная ассамблея – Украинская национальная самооборона (УНА-УНСО)". 29 January 2012. Archived from the original on 29 January 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- "Консульство Грузии во Львове откроют "герои" кавказской войны". Росбалт (in Russian). Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- "Сторонники УНА-УНСО – против вступления Украины в НАТО и воевали в Чечне". ИА REGNUM (in Russian). Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- (in Ukrainian) Українська національна Ассамблея, Database DATA
- The Constituency № 121, Central Election Commission of Ukraine (2002 regular election)
- Results of voting in single-mandate constituencies, Central Election Commission of Ukraine (2002 regular election)
- "A brief course of UNA-UNSO history UNA-UNSO :: Articles". Retrieved 3 March 2015.
- "Yulia Tymoshenko's orbits / Ukrayinska Pravda". Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 17 April 2008.
- "The Makeup of the New Verkhovna Rada / Ukrayinska Pravda". Archived from the original on 17 March 2008.
- Far-right Group Flexes During Ukraine "Revolution" Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Associated Press, 1 January 2005
- mreža, Balkanska bezbednosna (31 May 2022). "Ukrajinci se na Košarama borili na srpskoj strani, i komandant Azova se prijavio". N1 (in Serbian). Retrieved 9 November 2024.
- Allenova, Olga (25 November 2008). "Foreign Traces in the Strange War". Kommersant. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
- (in Ukrainian) Відомості щодо реєстрації виборчих списків кандидатів у депутати Information on the registration of electoral lists of candidates, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
- (in Ukrainian) Candidates, RBC Ukraine
- (in Ukrainian) Proportional votes Archived 30 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine & Constituency seats Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
- "Russia launches criminal case against Ukraine's Tiahnybok". Interfax-Ukraine. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
- Head of the UNA-UNSO party became Valeriy Bobrovych (Головою партії УНА-УНСО став Валерій Бобрович). UNA-UNSO party. 7 November 2016.
- Мирончук, В. (2021). До Ліктя Лікоть. Темпора. p. 50.
- "ХОРВАТИЯ: КИРПИЧИКИ ВОЙНЫ И МИРА - Amp". zn.ua. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
- "Михаил Поликарпов. Жертвоприношение. Откуда у парня сербская грусть?". www.kulichki.com. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
- LLC, Helix Consulting (17 September 2010). "Украинские националисты УНАО-УНСО признали, что воевали на стороне Азербайджана в Карабахе" [Ukrainian nationalist UNAO-UNSO admitted to fighting on the side of Azerbaijan in Karabakh]. panorama.am (in Russian). Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
- Ukraine in the Crossfire. SCB Distributors. 5 April 2017. ISBN 9780997896541.
- "УНСО". Retrieved 3 March 2015.
- Democratic Changes and Authoritarian Reactions in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Moldova (Democratization and Authoritarianism in Post-Communist Societies), Cambridge University Press, 1997, ISBN 0521597323 (page 349)
- State Building and Military Power in Russia and the New States of Eurasia (International Politics of Eurasia), M. E. Sharpe, 1995, ISBN 1563243601 (page 173)
- "In Poland, Ukrainian Donbas War Veteran Faces Extradition To Russia". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 11 November 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
- "131-й розвідбат (курінь УНСО): народжений війною". 4 April 2016.
- "Volunteer battalions in eastern Ukraine: who are they? | UACRISIS.ORG". Ukraine crisis media center. 16 March 2015. Archived from the original on 18 December 2019. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- Ponomarenko, Illia (21 April 2022). "EXPLAINER: What to expect from the Battle of Donbas, Russia's new offensive". Kyiv Independent. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
- (in Ukrainian) УНСО, YouTube
External links
- UNA-UNSO Official party web page
- UNA-UNSO Official party blog in VK
Author: www.NiNa.Az
Publication date:
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The Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian People s Self Defence Ukrainian Ukrayinska Nacionalna Asambleya Ukrayinska Narodna Samooborona UNA UNSO UNA UNSO was a Ukrainian nationalist organisation It was composed by a political wing the Ukrainian National Assembly UNA and a paramilitary wing Ukrainian People s Self Defence UNSO Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrayinska Nacionalna AsambleyaFounded3 4 November 1990Dissolved22 May 2014 political wing only Merged intoRight Sector political wing only HeadquartersKyivParamilitary WingUkrainian National Self DefenseMembership 2006 8 000IdeologyUkrainian nationalism Ukrainian irredentism Pan Slavism Anti communismPolitical positionFar rightColoursRed blackSlogan Glory to the Nation death to the enemies AnthemStay my love don t cry honeyParty flagWebsiteunso wbr org wbr uaPolitics of UkrainePolitical partiesElections Ukrainian National Self Defense UNSO Ukrayinska nacionalna samooborona UNSO Ukrainian Dates of operation1994 presentGroup s Argo Viking Active regionsUkraineIdeologyUkrainian nationalism Ukrainian irredentism Anti communismPart ofUNA UNSO until 22 May 2014 Ukrainian territorial defence battalions 2022 present AlliesArmed Forces of Ukraine Georgia 1990 2013 Russian Federation Transnistria War Transnistria Transnistria War Azerbaijan Chechen Republic of Ichkeria Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belarusian oppositionOpponents Russian Federation Russo Ukrainian War Moldova Transnistria War Romania Transnistria War Abkhazia Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus Armenia Republic of Artsakh Pro Russian separatists Kosovo Liberation ArmyBattles and wars1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt Transnistria War War in Abkhazia 1992 1993 First Karabakh War First Chechen War Yugoslav Wars Euromaidan Russo Ukrainian War War in Donbas Russian invasion of UkraineIdentification symbol According to Andreas Umland and Anton Shekhovtsov the UNA UNSO was created in 1991 as a formation manned by UNA members who had served in the Soviet armed forces to confront the State Committee on the State of Emergency The UNA UNSO has been described by International security expert Andrew McGregor as a influential but fringe movement which deeply influenced far right politics in Ukraine due its visibility and militancy although it still had small numbers Although the Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian UNA UNA was the organisation s political wing on 22 May 2014 it merged with Right Sector the UNSO continues to operate independently The UNSO has participated in multiple international conflicts by sending volunteers to support various belligerents Including the First Nagorno Karabakh War Transnistria War the War in Abkhazia First Chechen War the Yugoslav Wars and the Russo Ukrainian War HistoryEarly years The UNA was created on 30 June 1990 in Lviv as the Ukrainian Interparty Assembly UMA On 3 4 November 1990 a congress of the Ukrainian National Association UNS was held in Kyiv On 11 January 1991 UNS squads headed by Yuriy Tyma guarded the Seimas Palace during the January Events in Lithuania On 30 June 1991 about 200 UNS members held a torchlight parade in Lviv commemorating the 1941 declaration of Ukrainian independence During the first days of the 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt a UNS squad led by Vietnam War veteran Valeriy Bobrovych left for Moscow the squad later laid the foundations for the Argo battalion On 19 August 1991 during the struggle against the State Committee on the State of Emergency the UNS created squads of the Ukrainian People s Self Defense UNSO in Kyiv The squads were formed around a small group of ethnic Ukrainian Soviet army veterans of the war in Afghanistan In December 1990 Yuriy Shukhevych the son of Roman Shukhevych was elected as the first leader of the UNS Because of the 8 September 1991 Declaration of Independence of Ukraine the sixth session of the UMA was renamed the Ukrainian National Assembly it became known as the UNA UNSO due to the UNSO s close association with the UNA Since its 1991 independence Ukraine has had separatist movements aiming to reunite portions of Ukraine with Russia and other neighbouring countries UNA UNSO stopped People s Deputy Goncharov of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union from reestablishing the Donetsk Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic and the Donetsk National Guard in the Donbas In Kyiv the Patriotic Forum Otyechestvyennyi forum was abolished In November 1991 the UNSO held a rally and due to a brawl involving UNSO fighters the government made the first mass arrests of UNSO activists In Odesa UNSO halted an initiative to create a Novorossiysk Republic influencing separatist movements in Bukovina and Zakarpattia On 7 June 1992 an UNSO group from Lviv broke up a Romanian congress in Chernivtsi which advocated the unification of northern Bukovina and Romania In early 1993 the UNSO had a reported 4 000 members Since 1994 UNSO volunteers in Georgia The UNA was registered as a political party in December 1994 and in the 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election three UNA UNSO members were elected as deputies to the Verkhovna Rada Ukrainian parliament In September 1995 its registration was suspended until 1997 UNSO was registered as a public organization in Lviv Ternopil Rivne and Poltava Oblasts only In practise however there was no distinction between the membership of both organizations From 1994 to 1997 UNA UNSO members became prominent in Ukraine through a number of anti Russian activities UNA UNSO deputies destroyed a Russian flag in the Verkhovna Rada UNA UNSO fighters joined Chechen rebels in the First Chechen War and activists organised demonstrations against Russian pop singers visiting Ukraine UNA UNSO took sides in Ukrainian church affairs and clashed with police during the July 1995 funeral of Patriarch Volodomyr head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate The organisations supported Patriarch Filaret Denysenko who was excommunicated by the Russian Orthodox Church and participated in violent attempts to seize property for the new church particularly in Rivne and Volyn Oblasts citation needed Membership peaked at around 10 000 members about 90 percent of whom were between 18 and 35 years old The organisation was depicted in Georgiy Gongadze s 1994 documentary film Shadows of War citation needed In 1997 the government of Leonid Kuchma banned the Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian National Self Defence UNA UNSO members responded with violent street protests resulting in over 250 arrests Dmytro Korchynsky one of those arrested soon left the organisation In 1998 UNA UNSO s new leaders were Andriy Shkil and Yuriy Shukhevych the son of Ukrainian nationalist Roman Shukhevych In the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election the organisation received 0 39 percent of the vote Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian Nationalistic Self Defense members participated in the 2000 01 Ukraine without Kuchma protest campaign In the 2002 parliamentary elections Andriy Shkil won an electoral district in Lviv Oblast and a seat in the Verkhovna Rada the party itself won 0 04 of the votes In 2003 Shkil left the party and he has become an aide to Yulia Tymoshenko During the Orange Revolution UNA UNSO members supported Viktor Yushchenko against his pro Russian opponents providing security for Yushchenko supporters and Orange leaders such as Yulia Tymoshenko in Kyiv s Independence Square Six Ukrainians fought on the side of Yugoslavia in the Battle of Koshare The commander of the volunteers was and he was also the one who led the volunteers into war UNA UNSO members in Kyiv during the funeral of Mikhail Zhiznevsky 26 January 2014 In 2005 Yuriy Shukhevych again became the party s leader In the 2006 parliamentary election it failed to win parliamentary representation with 0 06 percent of the vote and did not participate in the 2007 election In 2008 South Ossetian attorney general Teimuraz Khugayev accused UNA UNSO of joining a Georgian unit during the August war but no evidence has been provided According to an August 2009 Russian Investigative Committee report 200 UNA UNSO members and soldiers from the Ukrainian Ground Forces aided Georgia during the fighting Ukraine denied the accusation UNA UNSO deputy head Mykola Karpyuk said that unfortunately no organisation members took part in the Georgian conflict citation needed UNA UNSO participated in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election receiving 0 08 percent of the national vote and winning none of the five electoral districts in which they fielded candidates and thus failed to win parliamentary representation In March 2014 Russia brought a criminal case against the party and some of its members including party leader Oleh Tyahnybok of Svoboda for organizing an armed gang which allegedly fought the Russian 76th Guards Air Assault Division during the first Chechen war The organisation s Ukrainian National Assembly political wing merged with Right Sector on 22 May 2014 Leaders1990 1994 Yuriy Shukhevych 1994 1999 Oleh Vitovych 2002 Andriy Shkil 2005 Yuriy Shukhevych 2015 2016 2016 Valeriy BobrovychInternational conflicts1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt in Moscow summer 1991 Transnistria War in Moldova spring summer 1992 War in Abkhazia 1992 93 Georgian Civil War 1991 93 Croatian War of Independence 1991 95 Bosnian War 1992 95 First Karabakh war 1988 94 First Chechen War in Russia 1995 96 Kosovo War in Yugoslavia 1998 99 Russo Ukrainian War 2014 present Transnistria The Vakhtang Gorgasal Order first class During the Transnistria War UNA UNSO members fought with Transnistrian separatists against Moldovan government forces purportedly in defence of Transnistria s large ethnic Ukrainian minority Over 50 UNSO members were awarded the Defender of Transnistria Order Georgian civil war In 1993 UNA UNSO sent volunteers to the Abkhaz Georgian conflict against Abkhaz separatists The UNA UNSO Argo unit joined the Georgian side against Russian backed Abkhaz forces and some volunteers joined the Sokhumi Battalion of the Marine Infantry Forces of Georgia A CPT Ustym squad prevented an amphibious assault of Russian forces near Sokhumi sinking a Russian military motorboat Seven UNSO members died near Sokhumi and 30 members received the Order of Vakhtang Gorgasali medal The UNA UNSO units did not lose a battle in the civil war Sokhumi raid June 1993 Starushkino village ambush 15 July 1993 Shromi village assault 17 July 1993 Khomi defence 4 October 1993 Samtredia defence 17 October 1993 Russo Ukrainian War Emblem of the 131st Separate Reconnaissance Battalion UNSO UNSO had also fought in the Russo Ukrainian War as part of the Ukrainian Volunteer Corps and the Territorial defence battalions 131st Separate Reconnaissance Battalion UNSO 1st Recon Company UNSO and 55th UNSO Battalion citation needed It also fought in the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Ideology and imageThe Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian People s Self Defence 1994 party platform envisioned Kyiv as the centre of a new pan Slavic eastern military bloc International security expert Andrew McGregor said in 2006 that the UNA UNSO might be best characterized as an influential fringe movement and its high visibility belies its limited numbers Its anthem is Stay my love don t cry honey a reprise of Bella ciao ElectionsParliamentary since 1994 year links to election page Year Votes Mandate 1994 148 239 0 5 1 1998 105 977 0 39 0 2002 11 839 0 04 0 1 2006 16 397 0 06 0 2007 0 0 0 2012 16 913 0 08 0 UNA UNSO parliamentarians Andriy ShkilSee alsoCategory Ukrainian National Assembly Ukrainian People s Self Defence politicians St Volodymyr s Cathedral ownership controversy Tetiana ChornovolReferencesRight Sector registered as official party Interfax Ukraine 22 May 2014 McGregor Andrew 30 March 2006 Radical Ukrainian Nationalism and the War in Chechnya The Jamestown Foundation The radical right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 by Sabrina Ramet Pennsylvania University Press 1999 ISBN 0 271 01810 0 page 290 and continuing from there Wilson Andrew 2005 Ukraine s Orange Revolution Yale University Press p x Ramet Sabrina P 1998 Nihil Obstat Religion Politics and Social Change in East Central Europe and Russia Duke University Press p 257 Ukrainskie nacionalisty UNAO UNSO priznali chto voevali na storone Azerbajdzhana v Karabahe panorama am in Russian 17 September 2010 Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 V sluchae vojny my okazhem Baku posilnuyu pomosh euraspravda ru in Russian 5 March 2014 V sluchae vojny my okazhem Baku posilnuyu pomosh Minval az in Russian Ukrainskie nacionalisty sobirayutsya v Gruziyu voevat protiv Rossii 24 April 2008 Radical Ukrainian Nationalism and the War in Chechnya Jamestown Krashe zginuti vovkom nizh zhiti psom Refworld Ukraine Ideology goals organization and activities of the Ukrainian Nationalist Assembly Ukrainian Nationalist Self Defense Organization UNA UNSO treatment of UNA UNSO members by the authorities January 1999 August 2004 Singh Anita Inder 2001 Democracy Ethnic Diversity and Security in Post Communist Europe Greenwood p 114 Dymerskaya Tsigelman Liudmila Finberg Leonid 1999 Antisemitism of the Ukrainian Radical Nationalists Ideology and Policy Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism 14 Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism Umland Andreas Shekhovtsov Anton September October 2013 Ultraright Party Politics in Post Soviet Ukraine and the Puzzle of the Electoral Marginalism of Ukrainian Ultranationalists in 1994 2009 Russian Politics and Law 51 5 33 58 doi 10 2753 RUP1061 1940510502 S2CID 144502924 LLC Helix Consulting Ukrainskie nacionalisty UNAO UNSO priznali chto voevali na storone Azerbajdzhana v Karabahe panorama am Retrieved 16 April 2022 Ukraina Ru Ukrainskaya nacionalnaya assambleya Ukrainskaya nacionalnaya samooborona UNA UNSO 29 January 2012 Archived from the original on 29 January 2012 Retrieved 16 April 2022 Konsulstvo Gruzii vo Lvove otkroyut geroi kavkazskoj vojny Rosbalt in Russian Retrieved 16 April 2022 Storonniki UNA UNSO protiv vstupleniya Ukrainy v NATO i voevali v Chechne IA REGNUM in Russian Retrieved 16 April 2022 in Ukrainian Ukrayinska nacionalna Assambleya Database DATA The Constituency 121 Central Election Commission of Ukraine 2002 regular election Results of voting in single mandate constituencies Central Election Commission of Ukraine 2002 regular election A brief course of UNA UNSO history UNA UNSO Articles Retrieved 3 March 2015 Yulia Tymoshenko s orbits Ukrayinska Pravda Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 17 April 2008 The Makeup of the New Verkhovna Rada Ukrayinska Pravda Archived from the original on 17 March 2008 Far right Group Flexes During Ukraine Revolution Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press 1 January 2005 mreza Balkanska bezbednosna 31 May 2022 Ukrajinci se na Kosarama borili na srpskoj strani i komandant Azova se prijavio N1 in Serbian Retrieved 9 November 2024 Allenova Olga 25 November 2008 Foreign Traces in the Strange War Kommersant Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 November 2008 in Ukrainian Vidomosti shodo reyestraciyi viborchih spiskiv kandidativ u deputati Information on the registration of electoral lists of candidates Central Election Commission of Ukraine in Ukrainian Candidates RBC Ukraine in Ukrainian Proportional votes Archived 30 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine amp Constituency seats Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Central Election Commission of Ukraine Russia launches criminal case against Ukraine s Tiahnybok Interfax Ukraine Retrieved 30 October 2014 Head of the UNA UNSO party became Valeriy Bobrovych Golovoyu partiyi UNA UNSO stav Valerij Bobrovich UNA UNSO party 7 November 2016 Mironchuk V 2021 Do Liktya Likot Tempora p 50 HORVATIYa KIRPIChIKI VOJNY I MIRA Amp zn ua Retrieved 4 April 2025 Mihail Polikarpov Zhertvoprinoshenie Otkuda u parnya serbskaya grust www kulichki com Retrieved 4 April 2025 LLC Helix Consulting 17 September 2010 Ukrainskie nacionalisty UNAO UNSO priznali chto voevali na storone Azerbajdzhana v Karabahe Ukrainian nationalist UNAO UNSO admitted to fighting on the side of Azerbaijan in Karabakh panorama am in Russian Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 21 March 2022 Ukraine in the Crossfire SCB Distributors 5 April 2017 ISBN 9780997896541 UNSO Retrieved 3 March 2015 Democratic Changes and Authoritarian Reactions in Russia Ukraine Belarus and Moldova Democratization and Authoritarianism in Post Communist Societies Cambridge University Press 1997 ISBN 0521597323 page 349 State Building and Military Power in Russia and the New States of Eurasia International Politics of Eurasia M E Sharpe 1995 ISBN 1563243601 page 173 In Poland Ukrainian Donbas War Veteran Faces Extradition To Russia Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 11 November 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2022 131 j rozvidbat kurin UNSO narodzhenij vijnoyu 4 April 2016 Volunteer battalions in eastern Ukraine who are they UACRISIS ORG Ukraine crisis media center 16 March 2015 Archived from the original on 18 December 2019 Retrieved 22 January 2017 Ponomarenko Illia 21 April 2022 EXPLAINER What to expect from the Battle of Donbas Russia s new offensive Kyiv Independent Retrieved 21 April 2022 in Ukrainian UNSO YouTubeExternal linksUNA UNSO Official party web page UNA UNSO Official party blog in VK