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Ukraine’s army chief visits besieged city as Zelensky confronts graft scandal

Ukraine’s army chief visits besieged city as Zelensky confronts graft scandal
Ukraine’s top military commander said Thursday he visited troops holding the front line in a key eastern city besieged by Russian forces, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky grappled with the fallout from a corruption scandal that has engulfed his administration. (Reuters/File)
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Ukraine’s army chief visits besieged city as Zelensky confronts graft scandal

Ukraine’s army chief visits besieged city as Zelensky confronts graft scandal
  • A Kyiv court has begun hearing evidence from anti-corruption watchdogs
  • Tymur Mindich, a co-owner of Zelensky’s Kvartal 95 media production company, is the conspiracy’s suspected mastermind

KYIV: Ukraine’s top military commander said Thursday he visited troops holding the front line in a key eastern city besieged by Russian forces, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky grappled with the fallout from a corruption scandal that has engulfed his administration.
After Zelensky’s justice and energy ministers quit Wednesday amid the investigation into alleged energy sector graft, the government fired the vice president of Energoatom, the state-owned nuclear power company believed by investigators to be at the center of the kickback scheme.
The heads of Energoatom’s finance, legal and procurement departments and a consultant to Energoatom’s president were also dismissed in the clear-out, Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko said late Wednesday.
A Kyiv court has begun hearing evidence from anti-corruption watchdogs whose 15-month investigation, including 1,000 hours of wiretaps, has brought the detention of five people and implicated another seven in the scheme that allegedly earned about $100 million.
Tymur Mindich, a co-owner of Zelensky’s Kvartal 95 media production company, is the conspiracy’s suspected mastermind. His whereabouts are unknown.
The investigation has prompted questions about what the country’s highest officials knew of the scheme. It has also awakened memories of Zelensky’s attempt last summer to curtail Ukraine’s anti-corruption watchdogs. He backtracked after widespread street protests in Ukraine and pressure from the European Union, which has pushed the country to address entrenched corruption.


Merz urges Zelensky to take ‘energetic’ steps against graft

Merz urges Zelensky to take ‘energetic’ steps against graft
Updated 3 sec ago

Merz urges Zelensky to take ‘energetic’ steps against graft

Merz urges Zelensky to take ‘energetic’ steps against graft
  • The Ukrainian government must “energetically advance anti-corruption measures,” Merz told Zelensky
  • Germany has been the second-most important supplier of aid to Ukraine

BERLIN: Germany expects Ukraine to do far more to fight graft, Chancellor Friedrich Merz told President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday after a major corruption scandal rocked Kyiv.
The Ukrainian government must “energetically advance anti-corruption measures and further reforms, particularly in the area of the rule of law,” Merz told Zelensky in a phone call, a statement from the chancellery said.
On Wednesday Zelensky fired his energy and justice ministers over a giant money-laundering scheme in the energy sector, which has been battered by Russian attacks for almost four years.
In the phone call Zelensky told Merz about the investigations into the scandal and “promised complete transparency, long-term support for independent anti-corruption authorities, as well as further swift measures to restore the trust of the Ukrainian population, European partners and international donors.”
Germany has been the second-most important supplier of aid to Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.
On Wednesday Merz’s spokesman Stefan Kornelius told reporters that Germany was “concerned” by the current scandal, especially as “it concerns a sector that has received significant support from Germany, namely energy infrastructure.”
Nevertheless Kornelius said it “will not affect payments from Germany.”
“At the moment, we have confidence in the Ukrainian government” to provide clarity over the scandal, Kornelius said, adding that there was “close communication” between Germany and Ukraine on the issue.