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SIX MONTHS OF RUSLAN KRAVCHENKO’S POST: FROM POLITICAL PERSECUTION TO SYSTEMIC ABUSE OF POWERS

Зміст публікації

    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

    On 11 December 2025, the Joint Statement between Commissioner Marta Kos and Deputy Prime Minister Taras Kachka identified as a priority the comprehensive review of the election and dismissal procedures for the Prosecutor General. This is the most relevant time to replace the current Prosecutor General, Ruslan Kravchenko, in a meritocratic way, who clearly goes beyond the authority and whose actions do not correspond to the status of the highest procedural supervision.

    Ruslan Kravchenko was appointed as Prosecutor General in June 2025. Such an appointment is a largely political rather than merit-based process, as he is appointed by the President without any competitive procedures, with the consent of the Verkhovna Rada, which holds a parliamentary majority of the President’s party “Servant of the People”. Moreover, he previously was part of the presidential administrative apparatus in the regions.

    The short-term serving as the Prosecutor General once again made it clear that law enforcement agencies must be independent of any political influence and must not serve as instruments of pressure or intimidation against citizens and anti-corruption agencies. Political escalation and democratic backsliding occurred almost immediately after Ruslan Kravchenko’s appointment as Prosecutor General, as outlined below.\

    1. Intensified pressure on the anti-corruption infrastructure carried out under the procedural control of the Prosecutor General

    On June 22, 2025, NABU and SAPO formally notified the Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine and close friend of the President, Oleksiy Chernyshov, of suspicions of abuse of office and receiving illicit benefits. In addition, NABU already carried out operation Midas (investigation on the activities of a criminal organization in the energy sector under the leadership of a close associate of the President, Timur Mindych). Following this, in July 2025, intensified pressure on the anti-corruption infrastructure began, carried out under the procedural control of the Prosecutor General and at the direction of the Office of the President.

    This is evidenced by a series of events: 

    • Over 70 simultaneous searches conducted by NABU, the arrest of NABU detectives, namely Ruslan Magamedrasulov and Viktor Gusarov. 
    • In response to investigative actions against individuals close to President Zelenskyy, the Prosecutor General personally signed notices of suspicion against NABU detectives without sufficient evidence. The cases concerned private correspondence from 2015, a traffic accident in 2021, and most importantly – one of the suspicions was announced against Ruslan Magamedrasulov, a key detective in the case against Zelenskyy’s associate, Timur Mindich.
    • Subsequently, there was an attempt to dismantle the NABU and SAPO, by making them accountable to the Prosecutor General, which would have undermined the independence of these institutions. Media indicated that draft Law 12414, aimed at this, was developed within the Prosecutor General’s Office. 
    • Although the attempt to fully dismantle the anti-corruption infrastructure was unsuccessful, many harmful amendments were nevertheless adopted, including the abolition of competitive selection procedures in the Prosecutor`s system. Appointing prosecutors through a discretionary, manual process does not contribute to the sustainability or development of the institution, as it increases the risk of an appointment of non-integrity personnel. 

    2. The Emergence of Political Prisoners

    The case of Ruslan Mahamedrasulov is a striking example of politically motivated persecution. The NABU detective and his father were arrested and detained by the Security Service of Ukraine and State Bureau of Investigations for nearly five months. There are serious concerns that the case was fully fabricated, as the detective had been involved in uncovering an embezzlement scheme at Energoatom involving a close associate of the President (“Mindychgate”). The notice of suspicion was personally signed by the Prosecutor General despite the absence of sufficient evidence of a criminal offence and, consequently, the lack of legal grounds for detention. The detective was released in December 2025, just after Andriy Yermak had been dismissed.

    See details on Ruslan Mahamedrasulov case – here.

    3. Questionable appointments and russian ties

    A dishonest Prosecutor General inevitably begins appointing individuals with questionable reputations to key positions, making the issue of merit-based selection no longer merely a matter of depoliticizing the Ukrainian prosecution service, but the only effective safeguard against arbitrary personnel policies.

    Ruslan Kravchenko previously failed the SAP Prosecutor competition and was banned from the 2023 NABU Director competition due to reputational issues. Nevertheless, the President identified no concerns regarding his integrity and appointed him as Prosecutor General. This background has led to nepotism in personnel appointments, with integrity no longer a priority:

    • The appointment of Maria Vdovychenko, Viktor Lohachov, and Maksym Krym as his deputies, who have multiple persistent family ties with citizens of the russian federation and who are personally loyal to Ruslan Kravchenko.
    • The appointment of Oleksii Shevchuk to the SAPO competition commission raises concerns, as he was previously found to lack integrity during a competition for a position on the High Council of Justice. 

    Moreover, we detected Russian ties in Kravchenko’s family. Ruslan Kravchenko’s father, Andrii Kravchenko, obtained a Russian passport in June 2023. This occurred one year after the occupation of Sievierodonetsk, where he resided. After obtaining the Russian passport, Andrii Kravchenko crossed automobile checkpoints between the russian federation and the occupied Luhansk region at least four times between June and September 2023, using his Dacia Logan vehicle.

    4. Oleksiy Shevchuk case as a new attempt to undermine the work of SAPO

    On 23 December 2025, Prosecutor General Kravchenko delegated Oleksii Shevchuk, whose professional reputation and integrity are questionable, to the SAPO competition commission (he is the subject of journalistic investigations, has faced disciplinary action as an attorney, has supported unconstitutional laws of a dictator, Viktor Yanukovych, and has worked for pro-Russian individuals). Over 60 civil society organizations and media outlets called to revoke the delegation, but as of early February, it had not been reversed. 

    Considering Kravchenko’s previous background of proactive opposition to the SAPO and NABU, as well as his inadequate response to criticism, his appointment of Shevchuk to the commission represents a deliberate attempt to sabotage the competition, from which he will not back down. 

    Moreover, the Prosecutor General is manipulating with the false information in his latest statement by claiming that he cannot exclude Oleksii Shevchuk from the Competitive Commission responsible for organizing and conducting the selection process for vacant leadership positions at SAPO.

    See details on Oleksiy Shevchuk case – here

    5. Public threats to critics of his activities 

    On December 12, 2025, Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko, denying media reports that he had submitted his resignation, moved on to openly threaten his critics. 

    (Ruslan Kravchenko: “I know everyone who is currently working against me and against the Prosecutor’s Office as an institution. You don’t need to hide – I will come for each of you personally.”)

    The first open threat since the Revolution of Dignity from a top official toward all of his critics creates a direct threat to members of parliament (in particular, Anastasia Radina and Yaroslav Zhelezniak), civil society representatives (MEZHA, ANTAC, Automaidan, etc.), the NABU and SAPO (in particular, its Leadership Semen Kryvonos and Oleksandr Klymenko), journalists (Ukrainska Pravda, Dzerkalo Tyzhnia, Cenzor.Net, Hromadske, etc.), and constitutes an unacceptable crossing of all red lines.

    6. The ties of the Prosecutor`s General Office with criminal organisation in the energetic sphere (“Mindychgate”)

    In November 2025, NABU uncovered the largest corruption scheme in the energy sector, led by Timur Mindich, an associate of the President. NABU recordings highlighted the Prosecutor’s Office’s involvement, including cooperation with the criminal organization and participation of a senior official.

    «100%. There is serious money there. But the *** rates were laid out to me by the Office of the Prosecutor General, the SSU, and the ESBU – all the law enforcement agencies. That was the whole *** arrangement.»

    The Office of the Prosecutor General’s response was wholly inadequate – no internal investigation was initiated. Its representatives stated that the criminal case information was insufficient to cleanse the system or identify dishonest officials.

    7. Prosecutor General’s Office try to discredit an anti-corruption activists

    (Vitaliy Shabunin: “The SBI and the Office of the Prosecutor General leaked my intimate photos from my phone, which was confiscated during a search, to Telegram channels.”)

    All of these actions and decisions do not correspond to the standards expected of the Prosecutor General as an ethical and professional figure. Therefore, there is an urgent need to appoint a new Prosecutor General through a merit-based process, avoiding nepotism and political loyalty.

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