
Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies on Saturday said they had uncovered a major graft scheme involving the purchase of military drones and signal jamming systems at inflated prices.
The independence of Ukraine’s anti-graft investigators and prosecutors, NABU and SAPO, was reinstated by parliament on Thursday after a move to take it away resulted in the country’s biggest demonstrations since Russia’s invasion in 2022.
In a statement published by both agencies on social media, NABU and SAPO said they had caught a sitting lawmaker, two local officials and an unspecified number of national guard personnel taking bribes. None of them were identified in the statement.
Zelenskyy’s Statements
“The essence of the scheme was to conclude state contracts with supplier companies at deliberately inflated prices,” it said, adding that the offenders had received kickbacks of up to 30% of a contract’s cost. Four people had been arrested.
“There can only be zero tolerance for corruption, clear teamwork to expose corruption and, as a result, a just sentence,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram.
Zelenskyy, who has far-reaching wartime presidential powers and still enjoys broad approval among Ukrainians, was forced into a rare political about-face when his attempt to bring NABU and SAPO under the control of his prosecutor general sparked the first nationwide protests of the war.
Zelenskyy subsequently said that he had heard the people’s anger and submitted a bill restoring the agencies’ former independence, which was voted through by parliament on Thursday.
Ukraine’s European allies praised the move, having voiced concerns about the original stripping of the agencies’ status.
Top European officials had told Zelenskyy that Ukraine was jeopardising its bid for European Union membership by curbing the powers of its anti-graft authorities.
“It is important that anti-corruption institutions operate independently, and the law adopted on Thursday guarantees them every opportunity for a real fight against corruption,” Zelenskyy wrote on Saturday after meeting the heads of the agencies, who briefed him on the latest investigation.
(With inputs from Reuters)