Protests in Ukraine as Zelensky signs bill targeting anti-corruption bodies

3 hours agoVitaliy ShevchenkoRussia editor, BBC Monitoring

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Protesters gather in Kyiv after a bill was passed targeting the country’s anti-corruption bodies

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has signed a bill that critics say weakens the independence of the country’s anti-corruption bodies, sparking protests and drawing international criticism.

Critics say the new law undermines the authority of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (Nabu) and the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (Sapo) – placing them under the control of the prosecutor general.

In an address on Wednesday, Zelensky said both agencies would still “work”, but needed to be cleared of “Russian influence”.

After the bill passed, hundreds of people gathered in Kyiv for the biggest anti-government protest since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Demonstrations were also seen in the cities of Lviv, Dnipro and Odesa.

“We chose Europe, not autocracy,” said a poster held by one demonstrator. “My father did not die for this,” said another.

Ukraine’s chief prosecutor, Zelensky loyalist Ruslan Kravchenko, will now be able to reassign corruption probes to potentially more pliant investigators, and even to close them.

In his address, Zelensky criticised the efficiency of Ukraine’s anti-corruption infrastructure, saying cases had been “lying dormant”.

“There is no rational explanation for why criminal proceedings worth billions have been ‘hanging’ for years,” he said.

He added that the prosecutor general would ensure “the inevitability of punishment” for those who broke the law.

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To critics of the legislation, this is at odds with more than a decade of pro-democracy and anti-corruption efforts.

It is such aspirations that led to the Euromaidan uprising and the downfall of pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych in 2014, followed by Russia’s invasion and the deaths of hundreds of thousands people.

The Ukrainian government has cited Russian influence for curtailing Nabu’s powers.

The day before the controversial law was passed, Ukraine’s Security Service and the prosecutor general’s office carried out searches and arrests targeting alleged Russian spies at Nabu.

The move has sparked concern among Ukraine’s Western allies.

The Ukrainian independent anti-corruption system was set up at their insistence and under their supervision 10 years ago.

It was a key precondition for their aid and stronger ties as Ukraine declared a pro-democracy course amid Russia’s initial invasion of 2014.

“The European Union is concerned about Ukraine’s recent actions with regard to its anti-corruption institutions,” says European Commission spokesperson Guillaume Mercier.

“The EU provides significant financial assistance to Ukraine, conditional on progress in transparency, judicial reform, and democratic governance.”

Stamping out corruption is also a key requirement for Ukraine’s application to join the EU.

The European commissioner for enlargement, Marta Kos, criticised the bill’s adoption.

“The dismantling of key safeguards protecting Nabu’s independence is a serious step back,” Kos wrote on social media, saying the two bodies were “essential” for Ukraine’s EU path.

Ambassadors from the G7 group of nations have also said they would like to discuss the pressure on Nabu and Sapo with the Ukrainian leadership.

However, Ukraine’s allies would be extremely reluctant to roll back the aid and cooperation at a time when its troops are struggling on the frontline.