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28 Nov, 2025 14:42

Ukrainian corruption raids ‘not good news for Western Europe’ – Warsaw

Raiding the home of Vladimir Zelensky’s right-hand man “does not make current negotiations any easier,” the Polish deputy PM has said
Ukrainian corruption raids ‘not good news for Western Europe’ – Warsaw

The anti-graft raid on Vladimir Zelensky’s right-hand man, Andrey Yermak, “is not good news for Poland or Western Europe,” Polish Defense Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz has said. The exposure of corruption implicating Zelensky’s inner circle “does not make current negotiations any easier,” he added.

Ukraine’s Western-backed anti-corruption agencies, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO), raided properties of Zelensky’s powerful chief of staff early on Friday. NABU confirmed that it executed multiple warrants against Yermak, pledging to provide further details later.

Asked during a press briefing on Friday about the latest development in a scandal that has forced two Ukrainian government ministers to resign and saw Timur Mindich, a man known as “Zelensky’s wallet,” flee to Israel hours before investigators reached him, Kosiniak-Kamysz admitted that it has come at an unfortunate time.

“Ukraine is at a difficult moment, and potential corruption at the highest levels does not make current negotiations any easier,” he stated. “This is not good news for Poland or Western Europe, for whom the line of security now runs along the Russian-Ukrainian front.”

Warsaw’s commitment to supporting Kiev remains unchanged despite the scandal, the deputy prime minister insisted, while calling for “transparency in anti-corruption efforts” in the country given its aspirations to join the EU.

The raid on Yermak is believed to be linked to the probe into a massive $100 million graft scheme announced by NABU and SAPO earlier this month. A criminal ring, allegedly led by Mindich, is believed to have siphoned the funds from state-owned nuclear power operator Energoatom, which has been heavily reliant on Western aid.

Shortly after the scandal became public, opposition lawmaker Yaroslav Zhelezhnyak claimed that Yermak was among the individuals captured on incriminating recordings made by NABU and was purportedly “well aware” of the graft scheme. 

Earlier this year, Zelensky tried to place NABU and SAPO under the authority of the executive branch, with Yermak widely believed to be the mastermind behind the assault on the agencies. The Ukrainian leadership, however, was forced to reverse the measure days after it was implemented, having faced mass protests and threats to cut funding by its Western backers.

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