
Zelenskyy announces new anti-corruption bill to defuse protests
The contentious legislation was passed on Tuesday, meant to give the country's chief prosecutor oversight over the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAPO).
Ukraine's leader sought to portray the move as positive, claiming it would lead to quicker investigations, more convictions and less 'Russian influence'.
However, in the first major demonstrations since the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, thousands of Ukrainians took to the streets of cities including Kyiv on Wednesday to voice their opposition to the government's actions.
In an attempt to placate protesters, Zelenskyy changed course on Thursday by saying a new anti-graft bill would be brought before parliament later that day.
The president claimed in a Telegram post that the draft bill 'guarantees the real strengthening of the law and order system in Ukraine' and the 'independence of anti-corruption bodies'.
'It is important that we maintain unity,' Zelenskyy added.
As well as causing protests at home, the vote in Ukraine's parliament on Tuesday also generated unease in the EU, which Kyiv aspires to join.
In a post on X on Tuesday, the EU's Enlargement Commissioner Marta Kos said it was a 'serious step back', adding that the NABU and the SAPO were 'essential' for Ukraine's path towards becoming a member of the bloc.
The Ukrainian branch of Transparency International also condemned the parliament's decision, saying it damaged trust with international partners.
Zelenskyy's U-turn comes the day after negotiators from Russia and Ukraine met in Istanbul for a third round of talks, which were brief and did not yield a significant breakthrough.
Ukraine's internal problems have coincided with an increase in Russian aerial bombardments of Ukrainian cities.
On Thursday morning, Russian planes dropped two glide bombs on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, injuring at least 37 people, according to the regional governor Oleh Syniehubov.

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


Euronews
2 hours ago
- Euronews
Orban vows to veto EU budget over frozen EU funds
The Hungarian government will not vote on the EU budget until Budapest receives its frozen EU funds, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in a speech at the Bálványos Free University on Saturday. According to Orban, the adoption of the EU's record-breaking budget requires unanimity. "And until we get our backlog of money, there will be no new European budget. We will bring it home, and we will not make any concessions on our sovereignty," he said. Approximately €9.5 billion in COVID-19 recovery funding and €8.4 billion in cohesion funds make up the frozen funds by Brussels over persisting concerns about Hungary's democratic backsliding. Brussels and Budapest over the years have been at loggerheads on a range of issues, most recently that of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, but the situation has been made worse by the financial issue. Orbán accuses the European Commission of "financial blackmail" and meddling in domestic matters due to its reasons for freezing the funds. Hungary previously unblocked about €10.2 billion of the frozen funds following the adoption of legislation aimed at reducing political meddling in its courts and strengthening judicial independence. However, a complaint was filed by the European Parliament against the EU Commission for its controversial decision to release the €10.2 billion ahead of a crucial summit. Some €18 billion remains frozen, with no signs or indication of progress, but in front of the large audience, Orban vowed to get the EU funds. Orban claims Trump helped avoid World War III The Commission's landmark €2 trillion long-term budget for 2028–2034 emphasises defence and economic competitiveness. For it to pass, it requires unanimous agreement among member states and must also be backed by Parliament, by a majority of its component members. In his speech in Tusványos on Saturday, Viktor Orbán said that the election of US President Donald Trump has helped the world to avoid a third world war for the time being, but the chances of its outbreak are still increasing. Orbán gave a speech with a sinister tone, touching on a variety of topics that included the war in Ukraine and the Fidesz party. The Hungarian PM blasted the EU for backing Ukraine and accused the EU leaders of dangerously waging a trade war with the Trump administration that Europe "cannot win." While some of his claims were typically outlandish, Orban received applause from the audience, with one attendee saying, "We got a very clear, very understandable vision from the Prime Minister. And we are not in an easy situation."


Euronews
5 hours ago
- Euronews
Von der Leyen to meet Trump in Scotland on Sunday
EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said she will meet US President Donald Trump on Sunday in Scotland. In a post on X where she announced the meeting, von der Leyen added that they will "discuss transatlantic trade relations, and how we can keep them strong." Trump also confirmed the meeting will take place after arriving in Scotland. The European Commission earlier in the week briefed member states on the progres of trade negotiations with the EU and the possibility of resorting to anti-coercion measures in the tariff dispute between the EU and the US. The member states on Thursday approved the list of retaliatory tariffs proposed by the European Commission to counter US trade measures, with only Hungary voting against. The list includes an initial package of measures adopted in early April, with up to 30% tariffs targeting products including yachts, aircraft, cars and car parts, orange juice, poultry, soybeans, steel and aluminium. This was the latest development in a negotiation process that has lasted several months. The US currently imposes 50% tariffs on EU steel and aluminium, 25% on cars, and 10% on all other imports. On 12 July, Trump ramped up pressure on the EU by threatening to impose 30% tariffs as of 1 August if no agreement was reached. The White House said Trump will also be meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer during his visit. Trump golf tour blurs politics and family business The US President arrives in Scotland on a five-day visit during which he is set to visit a golf course in Aberdeenshire ahead of its opening on 13 August, and another near Turnberry. His family owns both golf courses. The fact that Trump is using a presidential overseas trip - complete with his large entourage of advisers, White House staff, secret service agents and reporters - to promote Trump-brand golf courses shows how the president has become increasingly comfortable mixing his pursuits on government with his family's business interests. Trump's assets are in a trust run by his children, who are also handling day-to-day operations of the Trump Organisation while he is president. The company has reached a number of lucrative foreign agreements involving golf courses, including plans to build luxury developments in Qatar and Vietnam, even as the administration negotiates tariff rates for those countries and around the globe. A White House spokesperson has called the president's visit to Scotland a 'working trip." She also said that Trump 'has built the best and most beautiful world-class golf courses anywhere in the world, which is why they continue to be used for prestigious tournaments and by the most elite players in the sport.'


Local France
8 hours ago
- Local France
France's top court annuls arrest warrant against Syria's Assad
The Court of Cassation ruled there were no exceptions to presidential immunity, even for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. But its presiding judge, Christophe Soulard, added that, as Assad was no longer president after an Islamist-led group toppled him in December, "new arrest warrants can have been, or can be, issued against him" and as such the investigation into the case could continue. Human rights advocates had hoped the court would rule that immunity did not apply because of the severity of the allegations, which would have set a major precedent in international law towards holding accused war criminals to account. They said that, in this regard, it was a missed opportunity. "This ruling represents a setback for the global fight against impunity for the most serious crimes under international law," said Mazen Darwish, the head of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression, a civil party to the case. French authorities issued the warrant against Assad in November 2023 over his alleged role in the chain of command for a sarin gas attack that killed more than 1,000 people, according to US intelligence, on August 4 and 5, 2013 in Adra and Douma outside Damascus. Assad is accused of complicity in war crimes and crimes against humanity in the case. Syrian authorities at the time denied involvement and blamed rebels. Universal jurisdiction The French judiciary tackled the case under the principle of universal jurisdiction, whereby a court may prosecute individuals for serious crimes committed in other countries. An investigation -- based on testimonies of survivors and military defectors, as well as photos and video footage -- led to warrants for the arrest of Assad, his brother Maher who headed an elite army unit, and two generals. Advertisement Public prosecutors approved three of the warrants, but issued an appeal against the one targeting Assad, arguing he should have immunity as a head of state. The Paris Court of Appeal in June last year however upheld it, and prosecutors again appealed. But in December, Assad's circumstances changed. He and his family fled to Russia, according to Russian authorities, after Islamist-led fighters seized power from him. In January, French investigating magistrates issued a second arrest warrant against Assad for suspected complicity in war crimes for a bombing in the Syrian city of Deraa in 2017 that killed a French-Syrian civilian. 'Great victory' The Court of Cassation said Assad's so called "personal immunity", granted because of his office, meant he could not be targeted by arrest warrants until his ouster. But it ruled that "functional immunity", which is granted to people who perform certain functions of state, could be lifted in the case of accusations of severe crimes. Thus it upheld the French judiciary's indictment in another case against ex-governor of the Central Bank of Syria and former finance minister, Adib Mayaleh. Advertisement He has been accused of complicity in war crimes and crimes against humanity over alleged funding of the Assad government during Syria's civil war. Mayaleh obtained French nationality in 1993, and goes by the name Andre Mayard on his French passport. Darwish, the Syrian lawyer, said that part of the court's ruling was however a "great victory". "It establishes the principle that no agent of a foreign state, regardless of the position they hold, can invoke their immunity when international crimes are at stake," he said. Syria's war has killed more than half a million people and displaced millions from their homes since its eruption in 2011 with the then-government's brutal crackdown on anti-Assad protests. Assad's fall on December 8, 2024 ended his family's five-decade rule.