Shop on Impakter Eco
  • Women
  • Men
  • Kids
  • Beautycare
  • Home & Living
  • Food & Drinks
  • Pets
Impakter
Shop on Eco Shop
  • Shop Eco
  • Culture
    • Art
    • Cinema
    • Entertainment
    • Literature
    • Music
    • Photography
  • Style
    • Architecture
    • Design
    • Fashion
    • Foodscape
    • Lifestyle
  • Society
    • Business
    • Environment
    • Foreign Affairs & Politics
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Start-up
  • Impact
    • Eco Life
    • Circular Economy
    • COP26
    • CityLife
      • Copenhagen
      • San Francisco
      • Seattle
      • Sydney
    • Sustainability Series
      • SDGs Series
      • Shape Your Future
      • 2030: Dream or Reality
    • Philanthropy
      • United Nations
      • NGO & Charities
      • Essays
    • Your Voice
      • Empower Earth
      • Empower Equality
  • SUSTAINABILITY INDEX
  • Startup-Hub
    • Companies
    • Investors
    • Organisations
    • Jobs
    • Events
  • Partners
  • About
    • Team
    • Global Leaders
    • Contributors
    • Write for Impakter
    • IMPAKTER Italy
    • Republishing Content
    • Permissions and Copyright
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Impakter
No Result
View All Result
Home Society Politics & Foreign Affairs

Zelensky: The Promises of Ukraine’s New President

Claude Forthomme - Senior EditorbyClaude Forthomme - Senior Editor
April 23, 2019
in Politics & Foreign Affairs, Society
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

This article is part of an editorial collaboration with Impakter Italia.  Authored by Eduardo Lubrano, it was first published in Italian on our sister publication on 22 April.


Now that he has won the elections with a popular mandate of over 60%, the new president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky will have to keep faith above all with what he declared in the last days of the electoral campaign:

“Ukraine has two main problems: the war in the Donbas and the fear of people investing in the country,” he said in a television interview.

 

War in the Donbas

Zelenskiy says the first step in ending the war in the Donbas is to establish a ceasefire.

“We cannot afford a long process, because every day begins with news of the number of dead and wounded in the war. We have no time for other solutions”, he said, adding that he was ready to negotiate with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Minsk peace process, which has stopped: “It must be restarted. It is a war with Russia, so the talks should be with Russia. It must be in the diplomatic format, with the presence of Western partners. We will never sacrifice our people or our territories. “

Ukraine must also start an information war against Russia, Zelenskiy believes. In previous interviews, he said that Ukraine needed to launch a Russian-language television channel that will broadcast in eastern Ukraine and in the Donbas territories occupied by Russia.

“We must reach all the inhabitants of the East and the occupied territories and tell them: “Guys, you have been brainwashed, you are part of Ukraine, we are waiting for you, you are Ukrainians.” And he has added, “We have to start paying their pensions.”

Zelensky aims to simplify the procedure by which Ukrainians living in the territories occupied by Russia get a pension. Currently, they must register as internally displaced persons and make difficult journeys to border control posts to collect their money on the side overseen by Ukraine. A particularly difficult process for the elderly.

Zelensky also promises that Ukraine will continue working toward integration with the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), but adds that the benefits of joining NATO have yet to be explained to Ukrainians living in the eastern part of the country.

“As a citizen of Ukraine I am for NATO, but we must explain to people that it is for security. We must reach out to all the inhabitants of the east. NATO membership must be decided through a referendum, “he said.

The fight against corruption

According to Zelensky, the Ukrainian investment climate depends on two things: the protection of businesses and the fight against corruption.

Zelenskiy has two anti-corruption advisers: the journalist who became a lawyer, Serhiy Leshchenko, and the lawyer and former member of the National Agency for the Prevention of Corruption, Ruslan Ryaboshapka.

On April 6, his team released a detailed anti-corruption program. At its center is the political will to change the situation. Its opening statement reads:

“It is wrong to hope that a corrupt state system has the will to deprive itself of its food base. Corruption for old politicians is like water for fish. The old political elite standing against corruption is like bees against honey.”

Zelensky’s anti-corruption Program

Here are the key steps:

  • Ensure real independence of the entire chain of anti-corruption agencies: in particular, anti-corruption agencies must be established through an independent international selection committee;
  • Remove immunity from legal proceedings for politicians;
  • Establish the High Economic Court;
  • Take away the power to investigate economic crimes from  police forces, such as the Ukraine Security Service, the Prosecutor General’s Office and the Interior Ministry, and transfer these powers to a new agency for economic investigations;
  • Decriminalize economic activity as much as possible and introduce financial and administrative fines for economic crimes, and keep track of public officials who harass businesses;
  • Strengthen penalties for public officials involved in corruption through demanding their voluntary resignation; confiscating their assets and placing a life ban on taking on any public office; courts are prohibited from releasing corrupt officials on bail;
  • E-government: the largest possible number of public services to business should be moved online;
  • Involve citizens in denouncing corruption through a system of rewards;
  • Ask Western law enforcement agencies to investigate Ukrainian officials who, according to Ukrainian anti-corruption agencies, are involved in corruption.

Cover Photo Credit: Volodymyr Zelensky portrait – Wikimedia Commons

Tags: UkrainevolodymyrVolodymyr Zelensky
Previous Post

The Most Important Progressive Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st Century

Next Post

Mindset Change Is Key to Building Sustainable Communities

Claude Forthomme - Senior Editor

Claude Forthomme - Senior Editor

Claude Forthomme is an economist (Columbia U. graduate) and aid expert; former director (ADG-level) of Europe and Central Asia Regional Office of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization; author of several fiction and non-fiction books in English and Italian

Related Posts

‘Still so Many Unknowns’: An Unprecedented Outbreak of Monkeypox
Health

‘Still so Many Unknowns’: An Unprecedented Outbreak of Monkeypox

May 27, 2022
Fossil Fuel Giants’ “Carbon Bombs” Threaten Climate Goals
Climate Change

Fossil Fuel Giants’ “Carbon Bombs” Threaten Climate Goals

May 27, 2022
3 Agritech Startups To Watch In India
Agriculture

3 Agritech Startups To Watch In India

May 27, 2022
Next Post
Mindset Change Is Key to Building Sustainable Communities

Mindset Change Is Key to Building Sustainable Communities

Recent News

‘Still so Many Unknowns’: An Unprecedented Outbreak of Monkeypox

‘Still so Many Unknowns’: An Unprecedented Outbreak of Monkeypox

May 27, 2022
Fossil Fuel Giants’ “Carbon Bombs” Threaten Climate Goals

Fossil Fuel Giants’ “Carbon Bombs” Threaten Climate Goals

May 27, 2022
3 Agritech Startups To Watch In India

3 Agritech Startups To Watch In India

May 27, 2022
impakter-logo-light

Impakter informs you through the eco news site and empowers your sustainable lifestyle with its eco products marketplace.

Visit here IMPAKTER ECO for your eco products needs.

Registered Office Address

32 Lots Road, London
SW10 0QJ, United Kingdom


IMPAKTER Limited

Company number: 10806931

Impakter is a publication that is identified by the following International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) is the following 2515-9569 (Printed) and 2515-9577 (online – Website).


Office Hours - Monday to Friday

9.30am - 5.00pm CEST


Email

stories [at] impakter.com

About Us

  • Team
  • Contributors
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partners

By Audience

  • Lifestyle
  • Green Finance
  • Culture
  • Society
  • Style
  • Impact

Impakter Platforms

  • Media
  • Up
  • Index
  • Eco for Sellers
  • Impakter Pro

© 2022 IMPAKTER. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Culture
  • Style
  • Society
  • Impact
  • ECO Products Shop – Try now!
  • INDEX – Sustainability Index
  • UP – Startup Hub
  • About
    • Partners
    • Team
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
Impakter.com uses cookies to enhance your experience when visiting the website and to serve you with advertisements that might interest you. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our use of cookies. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.