As muckraking journalists, Nayyem and Leshchenko had contempt for Ukraine’s politicians. So they became politicians.Illustration by Paul Rogers When Sergii Leshchenko was at university, in Ukraine, he dreamed of working in television news. He is the son of two Soviet-trained engineers, and grew up in Kiev, where he studied journalism. He aspired to become an on-air correspondent, but his speech wa
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Ereni the Prosecutor General’s Office had to suspend investigations against Yanukovych allies including ex-Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka, ex-First Deputy Prosecutor General Renat Kuzmin, Oleksandr Yakymenko, ex-head of the Security Service of Ukraine, and Ihor Sorkin, ( 検察 改革 ウクライナ 宇騒乱 politics 人事 法 司法裁判
政治と経済 Olga Rudenko: What to know about Boris Lozhkin’s book - Apr. 02, 2016
That Ukraine’s path towards something approximating to liberal democracy would be winding and difficult was always obvious. That its 40 million people have shown a lot of resilience in trying to reach that goal must, however, not be forgotten. As Kiev finds itself on the brink of a new political crisis, with its government surviving a vote of no-confidence, and the war still grinding on in the eas
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