Read more: Former Russian MP Voronenkov, key witness in Yanukovych treason case, assassinated in central Kyiv
To many in the West, this is their image of Ukraine.Ukraine doesn’t get into the mainstream Western news much except, it seems, when someone is assassinated, moves money offshore, or Russia escalates the conflict in eastern Ukraine.
Read more: Who was Denis Voronenkov, exiled Putin critic murdered in Kyiv
What bothers Putin is that Ukraine’s reform process is succeeding. It has already had some notable successes, which provide a striking contrast to the absence of reform in Russia. Reform in the Ukrainian energy sector has greatly reduced the opportunity for corruption where it was once rampant. The establishment of an anti-corruption bureau is producing its first potentially big success with the arrest of Roman Nasirov, the head of Ukraine’s tax agency, in a US$75m graft case--even while Ukraine’s judicial system remains mired in corruption. A new e-procurement system has made public procurement more transparent and therefore less susceptible to fraud. And a new financial disclosure requirement makes it harder for politicians and high government officials to hide their wealth. Support for reform from Western capitals is critical, though, both in terms of funding and expertise. That support is contingent on success.Faith in the process of reform is undermined by highly visible shortcomings; in particular, the failure to make even one significant conviction for corruption by the previous or, for that matter, the current regime.
Read also: Who killed Putin critic Voronenkov in Kyiv? Everything we know + video
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