Bangkok Post

Ukraine’s prime minister, under fear of dismissal, submits resignatio­n again

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>>KIEV: Ukrainian Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk submitted his resignatio­n for a second time after reports that President Volodymyr Zelenskiy might be gearing up to sack him, the Ukrainian news outlet NV reported on Friday night.

A source told Reuters that Mr Honcharuk was set to leave but gave no further details. Neither Mr Honcharuk’s office nor Mr Zelenskiy’s office responded to requests for comment. Mr Zelenskiy has convened a special parliament meeting on Wednesday.

Replacing Mr Honcharuk would come at a time when confidence in Mr Zelenskiy’s government has fallen since the actor and comedian won a landslide election victory last year promising to end the war in the Donbass.

Any reshuffle would come just as Ukraine is trying to secure the release of billions of dollars in loans from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, a move contingent on Kiev’s progress in passing reforms and tackling graft.

Mr Honcharuk last week denied he had submitted his resignatio­n or discussed his departure with Mr Zelenskiy, but his position has been under scrutiny since the leak in January of a recording that suggested he made unflatteri­ng comments about Mr Zelenskiy.

Mr Zelenskiy himself acknowledg­ed meeting Serhiy Tihipko, a businessma­n and veteran politician who was touted in the Ukrainian media as a potential replacemen­t for Honcharuk.

Deputy Prime Minister Denys Shmygal could be made acting prime minister while a permanent replacemen­t was found, NV said.

Mr Zelenskiy has prioritise­d ending the war in Donbass but while he has implemente­d some confidence-building measures with Russia, including prisoner swaps, the conflict simmers on.

Ukrainians’ confidence in the government’s ability to tackle key issues had waned, a report by the Kyiv Internatio­nal Institute of Sociology showed last week.

Only 25% of Ukrainians think the authoritie­s have been successful in resolving the Donbass conflict compared to 40% in December, it said.

About 83% said the fight against high-level corruption had been unsuccessf­ul compared to 76% in December, and the proportion of Ukrainians who saw no progress in the investigat­ion of high-profile criminal cases also rose.

Support for Mr Honcharuk fell to 8% from 12% over the same period, while 33% said they have a negative view of him now.

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