The Kremlin on Tuesday expressed shock over the apparent suicide of former transport minister Roman Starovoyt following his sacking by President Vladimir Putin a day earlier.

Starovoyt served as transport minister for a year and previously was the governor of the border Kursk region, where Ukraine had launched an incursion.

Authorities said Starovoyt’s body was found in the Moscow suburb of Odintsovo with a gunshot wound.

“It cannot not shock normal people. And of course it shocked us too,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, according to Russian news agencies.

Peskov said he did “not want to comment” but added that “The president was of course immediately informed,” he said.

Russian media had speculated that Starovoyt was meant to be investigated for corruption in the Kursk region. His successor was arrested this spring for embezzling funds earmarked to beef up fortifications in the region.

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Putin had appointed Andrei Nikitin as Russia’s acting transport minister hours after firing Starovoyt. Nikitin was on Tuesday addressing Russia’s parliament, the Duma, before it ratified Putin’s decision.

Neither Nikitin or the speaker of Russia’s parliament Vyacheslav Volodin mentioned Starovoyt’s suspected suicide in their opening speeches in the Duma.

Nikitin said “transport safety” would be one of his priorities as it is “especially important right now” with Ukrainian drones attacks causing chaos at Russian airports.

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Armenia Threatens 25-Day Military Camp for Russia-Based Election Voters

The Armenian government has warned that citizens traveling from Russia to “vote for bribes” in the June 7 parliamentary elections could be sent to a 25-day military training camp, with those who refuse facing possible prosecution. The Deputy Chief of the Prime Minister’s staff Taron Chakhoyan addressed the issue in a social media post on June 3, saying that anyone arriving from Russia to cast a paid-for vote will be called up for military service, and those who refuse to comply will face legal consequences.

His predecessor was fired after hundreds of flights were cancelled across Russia last weekend during Kyiv’s large-scale drone offensive.

Starovoyt’s death came as Russia has cracked down on military and some civilian officials during the Ukraine offensive, with the Kremlin tightly controlling the country’s ruling class.

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