Zelenskyy
fires ministers accused of involvement in bribery scheme as public outrage
grows
Ukraine
president also calls for sanctions against friend and former business partner,
saying ‘there must be maximum integrity’
Luke
Harding in Kyiv
Wed 12
Nov 2025 17.59 GMT
Volodymyr
Zelenskyy has moved to contain growing public outrage in Ukraine over a
corruption scandal in the energy sector by firing two ministers who are accused
of involvement in a large-scale bribery scheme.
Ukraine’s
president said the justice minister Herman Halushchenko and energy minister
Svitlana Grynchuk could no longer remain in their jobs. He also called for
personal sanctions against his friend and former business partner Timur
Mindich, the scheme’s alleged organiser.
Acknowledging
popular anger, Zelenskyy said: “There must be maximum integrity in the energy
sector, in absolutely all processes. I support every investigation carried out
by law enforcement and anti-corruption officials. This is an absolutely clear
and consistent position for everyone.”
Promising
accountability for those who break the law, he added: “Right now, it is
extremely difficult for everyone in Ukraine – enduring power outages, Russian
strikes and losses. It is absolutely unacceptable that, amid all this, there
are also some [corruption] schemes in the energy sector.”
The
affair is turning into a major political crisis for the president.
Anti-corruption activists, opposition politicians and army veterans have urged
Zelenskyy to take decisive action, even if that means the painful sacking and
jailing of people who are personally known to him.
It
follows a 15-month investigation by Ukraine’s national anti-corruption bureau
(Nabu) into the nuclear state energy company Energoatom. The chief suspect,
Mindich, is a businessman who co-founded Kvartal 95, Zelenskyy’s media
production company.
Mindich
reportedly fled abroad, possibly to Israel, hours before investigators arrived
at his Kyiv apartment to carry out a search. He was previously close to
Zelenskyy, although sources say they have had little communication since
Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Nabu
named Mindich as one of seven suspects involved in a $100m corruption scheme.
Under this scheme, Energoatom’s counterparties were forced to pay kickbacks of
10-15% to avoid having payments for services blocked or losing their supplier
status, the bureau said.
Grynchuk
and Haluschenko submitted their resignations on Wednesday. Both denied
wrongdoing. The justice minister said his suspension from office was
“appropriate” and vowed to defend himself, after one of his former advisers was
directly implicated in the scandal.
Earlier
this week, Nabu released audio recordings of the alleged participants
discussing bribes and using old-school code names. Haluschenko – Ukraine’s
former energy minister – is given the moniker “Professor”. Mindich is referred
to as “Karlson”.
Another
high-profile suspect is Oleksiy Chernyshov, a former deputy prime minister
already charged with abuse of office in a separate case. In a recording
released on Tuesday, Chernyshov can allegedly be heard discussing a
half-a-million-dollar cash payment, to be collected by his wife.
Oleksandr
Abakumov, the head of Nabu’s investigating team, said the scale of corruption
was huge. “This isn’t a story about corruption in Ukraine. It’s about how the
country is struggling with corruption, fighting with corruption,” he said,
admitting that the agency’s investigation – called Operation Midas – had “faced
a lot of obstacles”.
Sevgil
Musaieva, the editor of the Ukrainian Truth newspaper, which has extensively
covered the revelations, said the affair risked becoming a turning point in
Zelenskyy’s presidency. “In the short term, people need to see real
accountability and action, not words,” she wrote on social media.
She
added: “Now, more than ever, the Ukrainian leadership has to prove that it
reads the mood of the population well and acts accordingly. Minor changes here
and there will no longer be enough to bridge the gulf of distrust.”
In July
Zelenskyy approved a contentious bill that weakened the powers of Nabu and the
specialised anti-corruption prosecutor’s office. It is unclear if the move was
linked in any way to the Mindich case, but it quickly triggered the first
serious protests against his government.
Several
thousand demonstrators gathered outside the president’s office in Kyiv. They
waved banners and shouted slogans including “shame” and “veto the law”, after
parliament approved the measure. Zelenskyy backed down in the face of
opposition and passed new legislation restoring the agencies’ independence.
The same
month, Ukraine’s security service arrested a prominent Nabu detective, Ruslan
Magamedrasulov. He was charged with doing business with Russia and aiding an
aggressor state. Magamedrasulov appeared before the appeal court in Kyiv on
Wednesday, with his case adjourned. He remains in custody.
The
detective’s lawyer, Olena Scherban, said her client had been closely involved
in the Energoatom investigation. “We believe this is a political case and
political imprisonment,” she said.

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