As
yourself, was it ever OK for a diplomat to use threats to counter
what is regarded as corruption?
Weeks
Before Ukraine
Election, U.S. Envoy Urges
Firing Of Top
Anticorruption
Official
6
March, 2019
The
U.S. ambassador to Kyiv has called on Ukrainian authorities to fire
the country’s special anticorruption prosecutor and tackle its
corruption problem.
Marie
Yovanovitch made the calls in a speech given in Kyiv on March 5, less
than four weeks before Ukraine holds a crucial presidential election,
with the incumbent, Petro Poroshenko, trailing in the polls.
Western
officials have repeatedly voiced frustration that Poroshenko has not
done enough to root our rampant corruption.
Yovanovitch’s
speech, which echoed that frustration, was notable not only for its
timing, but also its bluntness, from a foreign diplomat.
In
her speech, Yovanovitch said that the chief of the Special
Anticorruption Prosecutor’s Office, Nazar Kholodnytskyy, should be
replaced to ensure the integrity of the anticorruption institutions.
The
government's efforts have "not yet resulted in the
anticorruption or rule-of-law reforms that Ukrainians expect or
deserve,” the U.S. ambassador said.
"Nobody
who has been recorded coaching suspects on how to avoid corruption
charges can be trusted to prosecute those very same cases," she
also said.
Kholodnytskyy
has been accused of assisting officials suspected of corruption to
avoid prosecution.
Speaking
to several media outlets on March 6, Kholodnytskyy refused to comment
on what he called "interference into another country's internal
affairs."
In
July 2018, Ukraine's Disciplinary Commission for Prosecutor's
Qualification (KDPK) rejected a request by the Prosecutor-General's
Office to fire Kholodnytskyy and ruled to reprimand him.
Yovanovitch
made the critical remarks a day before U.S. Undersecretary of State
David Hale's visit to Kyiv, during which he is expected to discuss
Ukraine's anticorruption efforts, among other things.
Last
month, the Constitutional Court overturned a law criminalizing
illicit enrichment, raising concerns about the Ukrainian government's
resolve to fight endemic corruption.
After
the ruling, the National Anticorruption Bureau announced that it was
forced to close 65 corruption cases under investigation.
Last
week, a Ukrainian media outlet published an investigation into
alleged embezzlement schemes in the country's military industry that
involved members of President Petro Poroshenko's inner circle.
Referring
to the report, Yovanovitch called for a complete audit of a
state-owned military procurement company and greater transparency for
defense contracts.
Western
officials say corruption hurts Ukraine's chances of throwing off the
influence of Russia, which seized the Crimean Peninsula in March 2014
and backs separatists whose war with Kyiv has killed about 13,000
people in eastern Ukraine since April 2014.
Poroshenko
was elected in the aftermath of the annexation of Crimea and is
hoping to secure another five year term in the March 31 election.
Polls show him trailing comedian Volodymyr Zelenskiy by about 9
percentage points and barely ahead of former Prime Minister Yulia
Tymoshenko.
President Obama fired every Bush-appointed ambassador upon his election.
For anyone who is incredulous that Trump recalled an ambassador, certain that it must be evidence of a conspiracy...
President Obama fired every Bush-appointed ambassador upon his election.
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