6:19 am today

Ukraine ministers resign in outcry over major graft scandal

6:19 am today
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky listens during a press conference in Kyiv on 31 October, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said the country's energy and justice ministers should resign over their alleged involvement in a sweeping corruption scandal in the country's energy sector. Photo: TETIANA DZHAFAROVA / AFP

Ukraine's energy and justice ministers have offered their resignations, shortly after President Volodymyr Zelensky said both should go over their alleged involvement in a sweeping corruption scandal in the country's energy sector.

Investigators earlier alleged a key Zelensky ally orchestrated a $100-million (NZ$177m) kickback scheme to siphon funds, triggering public anger at a time of widespread power outages caused by Russian attacks.

Ukraine has long been plagued by corruption and cracking down on graft is seen as a key requirement of its bid to join the European Union.

Zelensky said his Justice Minister German Galushchenko, whom investigators allege was involved in the scheme and received "personal benefits", as well as Energy Minister Svitlana Grynchuk, should tender their resignations.

Neither is known to have been charged and Grynchuk has not been mentioned as having profited from the scheme.

"The minister of justice and the minister of energy cannot remain in their positions," Zelensky said in a video posted on social media.

Shortly after, both submitted letters of resignation, Ukraine's Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said.

The scandal has triggered outcry among Ukrainians, who are suffering frequent heating and electricity outages from the Russian bombings.

"It's disgusting," Davyd, a 24-year-old content creator, told AFP, declining to give his surname.

"They're destroying us, our reputation, and our future. We won't have a future if we have crooks like that," he said, expressing concern over how the scandal would play among Kyiv's crucial backers in the EU.

People "raise as much money as possible to help the (army), and they are just hiding the money in their basements", he added.

"Why do they do this?"

'Internal enemies'

The allegations, unveiled earlier this week, centre on kickbacks from contracts involving Energoatom, the state nuclear operator and country's most important electricity provider.

Grynchuk replaced Galushchenko as energy minister in the summer.

Ukraine's parliament needs to formally approve both their resignations.

Olena Boikova, 57, a retiree, said she felt "indignation" and called those implicated in the scheme "internal enemies".

Ordering the ministers to step down, Zelensky said it was "absolutely unacceptable that there are still some (corruption) schemes in the energy sector" while Ukrainians are facing daily outages from Russian attacks.

Russia has battered Ukraine's energy grid with nightly drone and missile strikes in what Kyiv calls cynical attacks that seek to plunge millions of Ukrainians into the darkness and cold through the winter.

Investigators say the scheme was masterminded by Timur Mindich, a former business associate of Zelensky.

Mindich co-owns the production company Kvartal 95, founded by Zelensky when he was a star comedian before entering politics.

He fled the country shortly before the allegations were announced on Monday, the state border service said.

Zelensky has not commented on Mindich's role in the scheme, but Prime Minister Svyrydenko said she was imposing personal sanctions on him and another businessman charged, Oleksandr Tsukerman.

Kvartal 95, which produced Zelensky's "Servant of the People" TV series, said the probe was not "related to the work of the studio".

The scandal presents a major test for Zelensky, who faces accusations of centralising power and silencing critics after the Russian invasion.

Earlier this year, there was a massive backlash from the public and in Brussels over attempts to strip the independence of the two anti-corruption bodies that are investigating and prosecuting this case.

- AFP

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