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Abromavicius resignation sparking crisis
Journal Staff Report

President and PM meet with G7 ambassadors; Lagarde voices 'concern'

KIEV, Feb. 4 - Ukraine faced the prospect Thursday of a fresh political crisis sparked by its reformist economy minister's resignation in protest at alleged influence-peddling and state graft, AFP reported.

International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde said Aivaras Abromavicius's resignation was a troubling sign for its $17.5 billion bailout program.

The resignation is a “concern," Lagarde said in an online news conference. "If the allegations that he makes in his resignation are correct, then it's obviously an indication that the anti-corruption measures that were committed by the government are not yet working."

President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk hastily arranged a meeting with ambassadors from the G7 nations after the envoys expressed deep concern about the resignation.

Poroshenko held last-ditch talks with the Lithuanian-born minister Wednesday in a bid to change his mind and reassure him that all his charges would be investigated in full.

But parliament began debating the 40-year-old's future in a tense session that saw one deputy raise the prospect of holding a vote of no confidence in the government as a whole.

"It is clear to everyone that we are entering a serious political crisis," parliamentary speaker Volodymyr Groysman told reporters.

Western frustration has been fanned by the fact that Abromavicius is the fourth reform-minded minister to tender his resignation since Ukraine's 2014 revolution broke its ties with Russia and set it on a European course.

Parliament never approved any of their dismissals and they still remain acting ministers in their posts.

Yet the attempted flight of cabinet members charged with putting the war-scarred nation of about 40 million on a transparent path toward growth highlights the problems Ukraine faces in fulfilling its dream of joining the EU.

The G7 envoys emerged from their talks with Ukraine's two top leaders and Groysman without divulging much about what was discussed.
The Ukrainian leaders "assured us that they will work together, will work in unity for the reforms in the country," Japanese Ambassador Shigeki Sumi said on behalf of the foreign group.

But the European Business Association on Ukraine openly called the economy chief's resignation "an appalling symptom, which is likely to have very negative repercussions."

Abromavicius leveled his most serious charges against a top Poroshenko party member named Igor Kononenko -- a figure the Ukrainian media often refer to as a "grey cardinal" who implements the president's political will.

He accused Kononenko of trying to push his own people into economy ministry positions that oversee the cash flows of Ukraine's vast but notoriously opaque defence and energy industries.



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