Protestors picketed the German and French embassies in Kyiv, as the two countries' foreign ministers arrived in Ukraine to try to revive peace talks with Russia-backed separatists. (RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service)
Prosecutor cites "criminal probe" into Ukraine's top cop:
By Christopher Miller
KYIV -- Ukrainian Prosecutor-General Yuriy Lutsenko has announced that his office has opened a criminal probe of Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, raising the specter of another public blow to a fractious ruling coalition.
But while the September 14 statement was likely to erode confidence at home and abroad in the country's center-right government, which has been accused of foot-dragging on cleaning up rampant corruption and nepotism, its effect on Avakov was less clear.
The NGO activist whose complaint reportedly sparked the prosecutor-general's announcement said that as far as he knew, it was up to a special anticorruption prosecutor -- not Lutsenko's office -- to pursue the accusation.
In a televised interview with Channel 24, Lutsenko cited a letter of complaint from Vitaliy Shabunin, head of the Kyiv-based Anticorruption Action Center, saying, "I receive more than a dozen letters from people, including Shabunin, whose letter was the premise for an inquiry into -- you won't believe it -- Interior Minister Avakov."
Shabunin subsequently told RFE/RL that anticorruption investigations into any minister's actions fall under the jurisdiction of the National Anticorruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU). Moreover, he said, he never sent any letter to Lutsenko about Avakov.
"Whatever letter and investigation Lutsenko is talking about is a mystery to me," Shabunin said.
Avakov is a member of the national populist People's Front party, which governs alongside Lutsenko's party, the president's Petro Poroshenko Bloc.
The People's Front has long advocated tougher action against Russia-backed separatists who are fighting government forces in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions, earning it the nickname "party of war" in some circles. Some of its most prominent members have pushed for measures that include declaring martial law and labeled as "collaborators and terrorists" some journalists who have reported on the conflict.
Since taking power after the Euromaidan unrest that sent pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych fleeing to Russia in 2014, the Poroshenko Bloc and People's Front have grappled for the upper hand.
Avakov has gained clout as he survived one cabinet reshuffle after another. He was reappointed to the job in April after cabinet changes that accompanied the exit of fellow People's Front member Arseniy Yatsenyuk as prime minister in favor of Poroshenko ally Volodymyr Hroysman.
Shabunin said his anticorruption center brought to NABU's attention a case involving 18 hectares of land near the northeastern city of Kharkiv that is thought to be owned by Avakov's family.
Lutsenko's spokeswoman, Larisa Sargan, in a Facebook post downplayed suspicions that Lutsenko was in any way targeting Avakov. "The charges against the current interior minister could be interpreted as a matter of the imagination that cannot be grounds for prosecution of the minister," she said.
Sargan suggested the anticorruption center might be seeking to drive a wedge between the country's law enforcement authorities with its allegations, adding, "The [Prosecutor-General's Office] and the Interior Ministry are aware that they have a common enemy -- crime and corruption -- against which they are fighting."
Avakov has been singled out by Poroshenko allies in the past.
On August 24, Serhiy Kaplin, a Poroshenko Bloc lawmaker, introduced a bill calling for Avakov's dismissal based on perceived failures to safeguard Ukrainians or lead the fight against rising crime.
The two-year fight against Moscow-backed separatists since Russia forcibly annexed Crimea has sapped precious resources from Kyiv and left swaths of territory in Donetsk and Luhansk outside Ukrainian government control, increasing Ukrainian dependence on international loans and support.
Crimean Tatar leader nominated for EU's Sakharov Prize:
By RFE/RL
The European Parliament's largest political bloc will nominate Crimean Tatar politician Mustafa Dzhemilev for the 2016 Sakharov Prize.
The European People's Party will nominate Dzhemilev on September 14.
The European Conservatives and Reformists bloc -- consisting of Britain's Conservative Party and the Polish Law and Justice party nominated him a day earlier.
Dzhemilev is expected to be one of the three shortlisted candidates chosen by the European Parliament's foreign affairs and development committees vote on October 11. Members of the European Parliament will decide the winner on October 27.
Dzhemilev is a Ukrainian lawmaker and a well-known Soviet-era human rights activist.
Dzhemilev, a former chairman of the Mejlis of Crimean Tatar people who strongly opposed Crimea's occupation and annexation by Russia, is currently living in Kyiv.
The Sakharov Prize -- with a cash prize of 50,000 euros ($57,206) -- has been handed out since 1988 to honor individuals and organizations who defend human rights and fundamental freedoms.
Not related to the conflict in the east, but this nice video report from RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service is still worth a gander:
Sixty-Year-Old Ukrainian Volleyballer Returns To Paralympics
Ukraine has sent its largest-ever contingent of athletes to the Paralympic Games. With 155 Paralympians competing in 14 different disciplines in Rio de Janeiro, Ukraine hopes it can top its fourth-place finish at the 2012 London Paralympics. At age 60, Petro Ostrynskiy is his country's oldest Paralympian. Before heading to Rio, he and Ukraine's men's sitting volleyball team shared their hopes of bringing home a medal.