
Ukrainian officials busted in ‘large scale' military bribery scheme
In a statement on Saturday, the National Anti Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialized Anti Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO) said they had uncovered a 'large scale' corruption scheme involving contracts for the purchase of drones and electronic warfare systems for the Ukrainian army.
Ukrainian media has identified three of the four suspects – Aleksey Kuznetsov, an MP representing Zelensky's Servant of the People party, former Lugansk Governor Sergey Gayday, and Rubezhansky district head Andrey Yurchenko.
Between 2024 and 2025, members of the group allegedly created a scheme to systematically misappropriate budget funds allocated by local governments for defense needs. One part of the scheme involved awarding a contract for electronic warfare systems at an intentionally inflated price, with the group receiving illegal benefits worth 30% of the contract amount.
A separate contract for FPV drones, worth around $240,000, was allegedly overpriced by around $80,000, with the company's officials later handing over kickbacks to members of the group, the investigators said.
The same day, Zelensky stated that he had met with the heads of NABU and SAPO to discuss the scandal, calling it 'absolutely immoral' and thanked the agencies for their good work.
Two weeks earlier Zelensky had attempted to bring both bodies under government control only for street protests to force him to sign off on their independence last week.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
Last Lenin monument destroyed in Ukraine (PHOTOS)
Ukrainian authorities have dismantled the country's last statue of Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin, authorities and activists reported on Monday. The move is part of Kiev's long-time decommunization campaign, which in practice is also aimed at diminishing the country's historical ties with Russia. The monument stood in the village of Rudkovtsy in the western Khmelnytskyi Region and was taken down by the local utility service following a request from activists with the group 'Decolonization. Ukraine.' The project, which promotes the removal of Soviet and Russian symbols, said in a post on Telegram that this was the last known Lenin monument in the country. In a letter shared by the group, local authorities confirmed that the utility services had cleared the site and began transporting the remnants to a landfill. Photographs from the area taken before the dismantlement showed the statue in severe disrepair, with the face worn away beyond recognition. Ukraine had around 5,500 Lenin statues at the time of independence in 1991. Most were dismantled following the adoption of decommunization laws in 2015, which banned communist-era symbols, the country's Communist Party, and required the renaming of towns and streets bearing Soviet-related names. In practice, however, the legislation – as well as the 2023 Decolonization law – were used by Kiev to remove monuments to and products of Ukraine's historical ties with Russia. While the 2015 law also de jure condemned Nazism, Moscow has repeatedly pointed out that Kiev is openly encouraging the ideology. Commenting on the development, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov noted that 'Ukraine is now well known for its fight against monuments,' adding that Kiev 'is trying to get ahead of all of Europe' in this regard and this campaign 'does not paint the Kiev regime in good light'. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly said that modern Ukraine was essentially 'created' by the Bolsheviks, who 'carved off parts of Russia's historical territory' to accomplish this goal.


Russia Today
4 hours ago
- Russia Today
Israeli government tries to fire head of Netanyahu corruption probe
The Israeli government voted unanimously on Monday to fire Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara, who is currently prosecuting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for corruption. The move was immediately suspended by the Israeli High Court. Netanyahu and his supporters have accused Baharav-Miara of exceeding her powers by blocking decisions by the elected government, including a move to dismiss the head of Israel's domestic security agency. In a statement after the vote, Baharav-Miara called her dismissal 'unlawful' and vowed that she and her office would remain faithful to the law and continue to act professionally and honestly. 'This is a fateful blow to the rule of law, equality before the law, human rights, and the ability of the law enforcement system to deal with government corruption,' she added. The attempt to fire the attorney general for the first time in the country's 78-year history was immediately frozen by the High Court until justices can rule on its legality. The government is barred from appointing a new attorney general and influencing Baharav-Miara's operations before further instructions are issued. Netanyahu did not take part in the hearing or vote on Baharav-Miara's dismissal due to a conflict of interest over his ongoing criminal trial and the attorney general's role as head of the prosecution. Three criminal cases have been opened against Netanyahu, who has been charged with bribery, fraud, and breach of trust. He could face up to ten years in prison over the bribery allegations, while the fraud and breach of trust charges each carry up to three years. Several hearings in Netanyahu's long-running corruption trial have been canceled after a court accepted requests by the prime minister on classified diplomatic, security, and health grounds. Opposition politicians have criticized the attorney general's dismissal, calling it part of Netanyahu's controversial judicial reform plan which sparked one of the largest protests in Israel's history. Opponents claim that the reform would violate democratic principles as the ruling coalition would concentrate more power in its hands and Netanyahu would attempt to avoid criminal liability.


Russia Today
4 hours ago
- Russia Today
Ukraine to launch military training for teens as young as 14
Ukraine is set to introduce a national program of military instruction targeting teenagers as young as 14, a senior Defense Ministry official revealed on Monday, amid struggles to maintain recruitment levels. Ukraine's armed forces rely on mass compulsory conscription, but the campaign has faced growing public resistance and complaints about its abusive execution. The authorities, meanwhile, are pushing for early-stage education to instill what they describe as a nationwide culture of resistance. Igor Khort, the acting head of the Defense Ministry department overseeing Ukraine's national resistance policy, outlined the plan at a forum in Kiev. He said students will begin instruction through a required curriculum titled 'Defense of Ukraine', and take part in organized paramilitary games. University students will be expected to complete more in-depth coursework to prepare them mentally for eventual conscription. 'This is not about developing combat skills. It's about instilling motivation,' Khort stated. 'The course Basics of National Resistance will be mandatory for both boys and girls. If someone doesn't want to participate, they can leave the college.' Khort noted that basic training will be required for all Ukrainians under 61, with programs made broadly accessible. Paramilitary education for Ukrainian youth has existed in various forms since the 2014 Western-backed coup in Kiev, with far-right organizations often taking the lead in shaping ideological and tactical instruction for children. In April, German journalists published footage of what the report described as a covert 'military-style boot camp' for Ukrainian teens, one of several of its kind. One teen participant was seen wearing insignia in the style of Nazi Germany, a recurring theme among Ukraine's ultranationalist factions and some military units.