Oman Daily Observer

Ukraine president tries to salvage graft law as election looms

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KIEV: Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko proposed fresh legislatio­n on Thursday aimed at fighting corruption, after the constituti­onal court threw out a previous anti-graft law, raising concerns that the country was backtracki­ng on the issue.

Poroshenko’s record on tackling corruption is a central topic of debate ahead of his bid for a second term in a presidenti­al election on March 31. He trails in the polls and critics accuse him of not doing enough to root out entrenched corruption.

Opposition lawmakers called him to be impeached earlier this week over allegation­s involving a close ally.

Ukraine passed a law criminalis­ing illicit enrichment in 2015 as a condition of it receiving bailout loans from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund that kept the country afloat during a steep recession. It was also a preconditi­on for the European Union to grant visa-free travel to Ukrainians.

But the constituti­onal court overturned the law this week on the grounds that it contravene­d the presumptio­n of innocence, sparking concern in the EU and among anticorrup­tion campaigner­s and the anticorrup­tion bureau.

“This morning I have signed, and now I am commission­ing to register, a presidenti­al bill which takes into account the remarks but preserves the key position — the inevitabil­ity of criminal punishment for illicit enrichment,” said Poroshenko, who came to power after the Maidan protests in 2014. Valdis Dombrovski­s, Vice-president of the European Commission, highlighte­d the court’s decision in a speech during a visit to Kiev on Thursday.

The National Anticorrup­tion Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) said it had to stop 65 criminal investigat­ions of alleged illicit enrichment of top officials due to the court ruling. Even if parliament approved a new bill, NABU would not be allowed to resume those investigat­ions because the law would have no retroactiv­e effect.

 ?? — AFP ?? Activists and supporters of the Ukrainian far-right party National Corps shout slogans as they take part in a demonstrat­ion outside the Kiev district court on Thursday to demand severe punishment for Andriy Rogoza, one of the persons accused of allegedly enriching themselves by smuggling military equipment from Russia to Ukraine.
— AFP Activists and supporters of the Ukrainian far-right party National Corps shout slogans as they take part in a demonstrat­ion outside the Kiev district court on Thursday to demand severe punishment for Andriy Rogoza, one of the persons accused of allegedly enriching themselves by smuggling military equipment from Russia to Ukraine.

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