“Incentives to give envelopes”: Corruption, a pitfall to the reconstruction of Ukraine

“Incentives to give envelopes”: Corruption, a pitfall to the reconstruction of Ukraine
“Incentives to give envelopes”: Corruption, a pitfall to the reconstruction of Ukraine

When Bart Gruyaert and his French company Neo-Eco agreed to rebuild housing at the end of 2022 in Gostomel, a suburb of kyiv, they hoped to help erase the scars of war in this city badly damaged at the start of the Russian invasion .

Former Ukrainian soldiers, now employees of the French company Neo-Eco, work to clear the debris of a school destroyed by Russian bombing in the village of Lyubomyrivka, in the Mykolaiv region, February 14, 2024 , in the midst of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

AFP

But when submitting the building permit, the local military administration, the equivalent of a town hall in times of conflict, sets an astonishing condition: to receive the funds for the project, which had some twenty million euros of private financing. , under the pretext of becoming the project managers.

“They said […]: ‘It is better that you transfer the money you received to our account’. But it doesn’t work like that!”, this Belgian project director told AFP. The company refuses and the situation quickly becomes “impossible”, explains Bart Gruyaert.

Administration officials drag things out by constantly adding new conditions to the contract. There also come incentives to “give envelopes” to certain officials, according to him.

Progress

In September 2023, Neo-Eco reluctantly decided to abandon the project. This case is far from isolated.

Ukraine has suffered endemic corruption since the fall of the Soviet Union, although it has stepped up efforts over the past decade to advance its ambition to join the European Union.

It was ranked 104th out of 180 countries by Transparency International’s corruption index in 2023, a score that is nevertheless increasing.

Observers fear that this persistent problem could slow down the reconstruction of the war-ravaged country by dissuading international partners from investing the huge sums needed. The total cost is estimated at $486 billion by the World Bank, the UN, the European Union and the Ukrainian government.

Bart Gruyaert assures that his bad experience at Gostomel did not discourage Neo-Eco from investing in Ukraine, on the contrary. He is working on several other projects and encourages other companies to do the same, judging that the country is “making a lot of progress” on corruption.

Zigzag between obstacles

We simply had to learn to “zigzag between the different obstacles”, Bart Gruyaert euphemistically, explaining that he works primarily with the localities he trusts.

In Gostomel, judicial authorities have since revealed a system of “embezzlement” within the military administration. Its then leader, Serguiï Boryssiouk, is accused along with other officials of having appropriated sums intended for the reconstruction of residences, which were left in ruins.

In June 2023, after the first accusations emerged, he was removed from office by decree of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. A few days before, he had held a press conference in which he assured that he had done his best to rebuild Gostomel and accused the judicial authorities of “having the wrong enemy”.

The total damage amounts to 21 million hryvnias, or nearly 450,000 francs, according to a state audit published in December 2023.

“Question of will”

Similar cases have broken out in other regions, not to mention scandals which have shaken the highest levels of the army or ministries. Andriï Borovyk, executive director of Transparency International, says these cases, while embarrassing, help ensure the problem is not “forgotten.”

The director of the national agency for the prevention of corruption, Viktor Pavlouchtchyk, says that these examples show the “effectiveness” of the authorities and the progress made in combating impunity.

Even ten years ago, “who would have thought that high-ranking officials could be accused of crimes? And now we have very good examples,” he says.

All areas combined, around 500 corruption cases have been opened since the start of the year by the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU), which adds that around sixty people have been convicted.

By all accounts, much remains to be done. It is still common for local officials to have interests in construction companies, for example through their family, pointed out several of the AFP interlocutors.

To prevent conflicts of interest, Ukraine is seeking to make the reconstruction process more transparent. Last year, the authorities launched the DREAM platform, accessible online to all, which lists projects of this type.

The goal is to allow investors, citizens or journalists to track the progress of construction projects and find data on their financing or sponsors.

ATS

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