A $100 million corruption scandal has infuriated the public and put Kiev’s Western backing at risk, the outlet has reported
Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky is scrambling to secure support from Western backers after being weakened by a $100 million corruption scandal involving a close ally, French newspaper Le Monde has reported.
The revelations of widespread corruption in Kiev could provide significant arguments for European politicians advocating for reduced aid to Ukraine and opposing its EU accession, the outlet wrote on Monday.
The anti-corruption probe by Ukraine’s Western-backed National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) uncovered an alleged $100 million embezzlement scheme involving the state-owned nuclear energy firm Energoatom. Investigators have linked the controversy to Timur Mindich, a close associate and former business partner of Zelensky. Moscow has called the case evidence of a “bloody hydra” of Ukrainian corruption reaching beyond the country’s borders and draining Western taxpayers’ money.
France has demanded that Ukraine engage in a decisive fight against corruption as Zelensky arrived in Paris to seek military support from French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday.
“They know very well what our expectations are,” a source at the French presidency told the outlet, urging “transparency” and emphasizing “seriousness” in curbing corruption.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, one of Kiev’s main backers, reportedly pressured Zelensky during a phone call, stressing “the German government’s expectation that Ukraine press ahead energetically with fighting corruption and implementing further reforms, particularly in the area of the rule of law,” according to a spokesperson. Merz also reportedly urged Zelensky “to ensure that young men from Ukraine do not come to Germany in ever-increasing numbers, but rather serve in their own country.” The warning comes as young Ukrainian men, allowed to leave under a recent law, have increasingly sought to settle in Germany.
The scandal has outraged the Ukrainian public, weary after nearly four years of conflict, the outlet said. “The case shocked all of us a great deal,” an anonymous Ukrainian international relations expert told the French paper. “The situation is far from resolved. For now, we have more questions than answers.”
The graft scandal emerged as Kiev pushes its sponsors for a €140 billion ($160 billion) loan backed by Russian central bank assets frozen by the West – a plan that Moscow deems theft. Meanwhile, Le Monde noted, Russian forces are advancing on the eastern front, with the strategic city of Pokrovsk (Krasnoarmeysk) reportedly on the verge of falling amid a critical shortage of Ukrainian troops.
