-
Boeing defense workers launch strike over contract dispute
-
Grand Canyon fire rages, one month on
-
Djokovic withdraws from ATP Cincinnati Masters
-
Brazil's Paixao promises 'big things' at Marseille unveiling
-
Shubman Gill: India's elegant captain
-
Trump says to name new labor statistics chief this week
-
England v India: Three talking points
-
Exceptional Nordic heatwave stumps tourists seeking shade
-
'Musical cocoon': Polish mountain town hosts Chopin fest
-
A 'Thinker' drowns in plastic garbage as UN treaty talks open
-
India's Siraj 'woke up believing' ahead of Test heroics
-
Israeli PM says to brief army on Gaza war plan
-
Frustrated Stokes refuses to blame Brook for England collapse
-
Moscow awaits 'important' Trump envoy visit before sanctions deadline
-
Schick extends Bayer Leverkusen contract until 2030
-
Tesla approves $29 bn in shares to Musk as court case rumbles on
-
Stocks rebound on US rate cut bets
-
Swiss eye 'more attractive' offer for Trump after tariff shock
-
Trump says will name new economics data official this week
-
Three things we learned from the Hungarian Grand Prix
-
Lions hooker Sheehan banned over Lynagh incident
-
Jordan sees tourism slump over Gaza war
-
China's Baidu to deploy robotaxis on rideshare app Lyft
-
Israel wants world attention on hostages held in Gaza
-
Pacific algae invade Algeria beaches, pushing humans and fish away
-
Siraj stars as India beat England by six runs in fifth-Test thriller
-
Stocks mostly rise as traders boost US rate cut bets
-
S.Africa eyes new markets after US tariffs: president
-
Trump envoy's visit will be 'important', Moscow says
-
BP makes largest oil, gas discovery in 25 years off Brazil
-
South Korea removing loudspeakers on border with North
-
Italy fines fast-fashion giant Shein for 'green' claims
-
Shares in UK banks jump after car loan court ruling
-
Beijing issues new storm warning after deadly floods
-
Most markets rise as traders US data boosts rate cut bets
-
17 heat records broken in Japan
-
Most markets rise as traders weigh tariffs, US jobs
-
Tycoon who brought F1 to Singapore pleads guilty in graft case
-
Australian police charge Chinese national with 'foreign interference'
-
Torrential rain in Taiwan kills four over past week
-
Rwanda bees being wiped out by pesticides
-
Tourism boom sparks backlash in historic heart of Athens
-
Doctors fight vaccine mistrust as Romania hit by measles outbreak
-
Fritz fights through to reach ATP Toronto Masters quarters
-
Trump confirms US envoy Witkoff to travel to Russia in coming week
-
Mighty Atom: how the A-bombs shaped Japanese arts
-
'Let's go fly a kite': Capturing wind for clean energy in Ireland
-
Pakistan beat West Indies by 13 runs to capture T20 series
-
80 years on, Korean survivors of WWII atomic bombs still suffer
-
Teenage kicks: McIntosh, 12-year-old Yu set to rule the pool at LA 2028
RBGPF | 0.08% | 75 | $ | |
RYCEF | 2.07% | 14.5 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.87% | 23.07 | $ | |
BTI | 2.16% | 55.55 | $ | |
RIO | 0.58% | 60 | $ | |
NGG | 1.14% | 72.65 | $ | |
GSK | 0.32% | 37.68 | $ | |
RELX | 0.73% | 51.97 | $ | |
BP | 2.28% | 32.49 | $ | |
AZN | 0.86% | 74.59 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
SCS | 38.6% | 16.58 | $ | |
VOD | 0.72% | 11.04 | $ | |
BCC | -0.77% | 82.71 | $ | |
BCE | -1.12% | 23.31 | $ | |
CMSD | 1.18% | 23.63 | $ | |
JRI | 0.76% | 13.2 | $ |
Zelenskyy anti-graft gamble
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy entered office as the public face of a reformist wave, yet today he stands accused of dismantling the very anti-corruption architecture that underpinned his legitimacy. On 22 July Ukraine’s parliament fast-tracked amendments that place the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO) under the effective control of the prosecutor general, a political appointee answerable to the presidency.
The new law empowers the prosecutor general to reassign high-profile graft cases “when circumstances make NABU’s work impossible,” a clause critics describe as a licence for political interference. Within hours Zelenskyy signalled support, calling the changes a wartime necessity—only to trigger the largest street protests in Kyiv since the first months of the invasion. Demonstrators draped parliament with banners warning of a return to pre-revolution impunity and chanting “EU or bust,” a reference to Brussels’ demand that Kyiv maintain independent watchdogs as a core accession pre-condition.
Financial stakes rose immediately. The European Commission privately told Kyiv that up to €18 billion in macro-financial aid could be frozen unless the rollback is reversed, while several donor governments paused disbursement of recovery funds earmarked for 2025-26. Foreign investors, already wary of doing business in a war zone, saw bond yields spike to a three-month high as rating agencies flagged “governance slippage”.
Domestically, the chill reached law-enforcement corridors. NABU agents reported surprise searches of their offices by state-security operatives, officially justified as a hunt for “foreign infiltration.” Anti-graft officials countered that the raids aimed to seize case files implicating influential wartime contractors.
Under pressure, Zelenskyy invited agency heads and civic groups to negotiate a face-saving compromise. Yet even a cosmetic fix may not repair the reputational damage: polls released this week show confidence in the president’s anti-corruption agenda falling below 40 percent for the first time since 2022. Meanwhile, NABU’s most sensitive investigations—ranging from drone-procurement fraud to embezzlement in frontline logistics—remain in limbo, jeopardising both battlefield efficiency and public morale.
Analysts warn that weakening the investigative firewall could hard-wire patronage into Ukraine’s post-war reconstruction boom. Billions in future EU and World Bank contracts risk flowing through a system perceived to be politically captured, raising the prospect of donor fatigue at a moment when Kyiv’s fiscal gap already exceeds 20 percent of GDP. What began as a procedural tweak is thus morphing into a strategic gamble: Zelenskyy can retreat and reassure partners—or press ahead and test whether Ukraine’s allies will prioritise unity against Moscow over governance standards at home. Either path will define his presidency long after the guns fall silent.

Confetti and fried doughnuts: Beautiful carnival in Venice

Moldova: Russia and his anti-social hybrid war!

Russia with a big mouth but nothing behind it!

The EU, Russia and the energy crisis

Вы, русские ублюдки и убийцы детей

Russian scum beats own soldiers
Ukraine: Russians die like fucking flies!

Typical antisocial Russian propaganda

Brasilien: Jair Bolsonaro Wahlniederlage ein

US Federal Reserve raises interest rate to highest level

Ukraine War: 36 Billion Damage to Environment!
