The National - News

SENIOR UKRAINIANS ACCUSED IN $40 MILLION AMMUNITION FRAUD

▶ Investigat­ion launched into alleged plot to misappropr­iate funds set aside for mortar shells

- NICKY HARLEY

The SBU, Ukraine’s security service, says it has uncovered an arms corruption plot to embezzle $40 million of defence funding set aside to procure 100,000 mortar shells as the war with Russia rages on.

Five senior defence officials and business leaders are suspected of being involved in the plot.

Top Pentagon officials warned this week that Ukraine’s troops were running out of ammunition after about two years of war with Russia.

On Saturday, five people were served with “notices of suspicion”, the first stage in Ukrainian legal proceeding­s, in connection with the fraud, including one person who had attempted to leave the country.

The suspects are accused of having “attempted to steal almost 1.5 billion hryvna [$40 million] from the budget by purchasing 100,000 mortar rounds for the armed forces”, the SBU said.

It is alleged they signed a contract to buy the shells from Lviv Arsenal in August 2022, after which the Defence Ministry “transferre­d the full amount stipulated in the signed document to the company’s accounts”.

The funds were then sent to a foreign company that was supposed to deliver the ammunition, but “not a single artillery shell” was ever sent to Ukraine, the SBU said.

Among the officials accused of participat­ing in the scheme are the current and former heads of the Defence Ministry’s department­s of military and technical policy, and developmen­t of armaments and military equipment, as well as the head of Lviv Arsenal.

Prosecutor­s say the stolen funds have been seized and will be returned to the defence budget.

Ukraine has weathered a series of corruption scandals in recent months, including within the Defence Ministry.

In August last year, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sacked all regional officials in charge of military recruitmen­t in a bid to put an end to a system in which some people were being allowed to evade conscripti­on.

More than 30 people faced criminal charges, accused of taking bribes and smuggling people out of the country in a scandal Mr Zelenskyy described as “high treason”.

Other scandals have involved the procuremen­t of goods and equipment for the army at inflated prices.

Ukraine is fighting to root out corruption as it presses forward in its bid to secure membership in the EU.

The bloc has stipulated that fighting corruption is one of the conditions of membership. Kyiv also faces a further headache as it continues to push for more support in defending against the Russian invasion, as Republican­s in the US continue to resist President Joe Biden’s efforts to send more military aid to the country.

At the weekend, Russia launched drone and missile attacks at civilian and critical infrastruc­ture across Ukraine,

Ukraine is fighting to root out corruption as it presses forward in its bid to secure membership of the EU

the Ukrainian Air Force said yesterday.

Russia and Ukraine have increased their air attacks on each other’s territory in recent months, aiming to hit critical military, energy and transport infrastruc­ture.

The air force said Russia attacked the central Poltava region with two ballistic missiles, as well as firing three surfaceto-air missiles over the eastern Donetsk region.

Filip Pronin, governor of Poltava region, said Russian missiles struck an industrial site in the city of Kremenchuk, causing a fire.

Further south-east, in Zaporizhzh­ia region, governor Yuriy Malashko said a drone attack had hit infrastruc­ture.

Russia launched eight drones on Saturday night, and Ukraine’s air defence systems destroyed four of them, the air force said.

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