Ukrainian state news agency Ukrinform said Babchenko, 41, was shot in the back, at his home, and died in an ambulance. It cited his friend and supervisor, Ayder Muzhdabaev, deputy general manager of Ukrainian TV channel ATR.
Babchenko left Russia in 2017, saying he no longer felt safe there after he criticized the Kremlin in a Facebook post.
He faced backlash after commenting on the crash of a Russian plane transporting the world-famous military choir Alexandrov Ensemble en route to Syria. They were traveling to perform for pilots involved in Russia's air campaign on Aleppo.
Babchenko said in his post that Russia was bombing Aleppo and children were dying. He called Russia an aggressor.
He described the ensuing "political harassment" in an essay in 2017. It included being singled out by senior politicians calling for his deportation and having his home address published online with an invitation to "visit."
Babchenko, who wrote for the Guardian and BBC as a war correspondent, was a former Russian soldier who fought in Chechnya. He described his Chechen experiences in a book, "One Soldier's War in Chechnya."
He fought as an 18-year-old conscript in the first Chechen War in 1996-98 and then volunteered to return for six months in 2000 during the second Chechen War, according to his publisher.
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