Economy minister abruptly calls it quits
‘I refuse to work in such a system,’ Amromavicius says of government
KYIV, Feb. 3 – Ukraine’s economy minister abruptly tendered his resignation Wednesday, saying overwhelming corruption had stifled his efforts to enact measures essential to returning growth to the cash-strapped state, AFP reported.
Aivaras Abromavicius’s shock departure laid bare divisions within pro-Western President Petro Poroshenko’s cabinet and highlighted the uphill battle the former Soviet nation faces in accepting transparent practices needed to join the EU.
“Today, I made the decision to submit my resignation from the post of minister of Ukraine’s economic development and trade,” the Lithuanian-born minister told a hastily-arranged press conference.
“The reason is the sharp escalation in efforts to block systemic and important reforms.”
Abromavicius and US-born Finance Minister Natalie Jaresko were appointed in December 2014 as part of Poroshenko’s efforts to bring new blood into the war-shattered country’s attempts to return to growth.
His resignation was greeted with instant alarm by Ukraine’s foreign investor and diplomatic communities.
US Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt called Abromavicius “one of the Ukrainian government’s great champions of reform”.
“It is important that Ukraine’s leaders set aside their parochial differences, put the vested interests that have hindered the country’s progress for decades squarely in the past, and press forward on vital reforms,” Pyatt and eight other Western ambassadors added in a joint statement.
Concorde Capital economist Oleksandr Parashchiy called the announcement “a worrying signal for foreign investors”.
The resignation comes in the midst of growing parliamentary displeasure with Poroshenko’s cabinet and infighting between political interests tied to business tycoons.
Abromavicius alleged that powerful figures were “trying to establish control over financial resources — first and foremost those of the Naftogaz (state oil and energy company) and the defense industry.”
“I refuse to work in such a system,” the 40-year-old former fund manager said.
A January report by Transparency International showed Ukraine ranking 130th out of 168 countries and territories surveyed for its 2015 Corruption Perceptions Index.
Abromavicius’s resignation must still be approved by parliament at a hearing that may come as early as Thursday.
Poroshenko himself failed to mention Abromavicius during morning remarks devoted to the appointment of a new regional governor.
But Kyiv media reports said he met Abromavicius later Wednesday in a seeming effort to change his minister’s mind.
Some of Kyiv’s more acrimonious battles have been waged between billionaires linked to Poroshenko and those of Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk — a hawkish leader who delivered passionate speeches atop barricades during Ukraine’s 2014 pro-Western revolt.
The two worked closely and in seeming harmony in the heady days that followed Ukraine’s break from Russia’s historic embrace.
But bitter rivalries have since surfaced and Yatseniuk’s own place in the government no longer suits some of the more outspoken members of the president’s team.