7 Comments

  1. hodgkinthepirate on

    > 30 real estate properties across Khmelnytskyi, Lviv, and Kyiv

    > Nine luxury vehicles

    > Corporate rights valued at 48 million hryvnias ($1,1 million)

    > A hotel-restaurant complex spanning nearly 3,000 square meters in Khmelnytskyi

    > Real estate holdings in Austria, Spain, and Türkiye

    > Foreign currency accounts containing approximately $2.3 million

    Say what?

    How does a public servant get access to all of this?

    People like me would literally move earth and water for assets like that

    Not trying to be that bloke who interferes in Ukrainian politics, mind you

    [Edited]

  2. Such-fun4328 on

    How to cash in on your country’s adversity. Similar to working for putin. Disgusting.

  3. dairyman2049 on

    It’s understandable that some would want to avoid fighting. Happens to every country in every war.

    However, profiting and purposely tampering against the Ukrainian conscription is a crime worthy of many decades. No forgiveness for this man and may he eat two meals a day forever in an enclosed space he cannot escape.

  4. Absol-utely_Adorable on

    I know a draft dodger who fled russia years ago and ended up in ukraine only to dodge their draft and flee to Poland. They are a massive turbo douchebag too.

  5. Jolly-Implement7016 on

    Great to see the progress made in fighting fraud. This is the way to get rid of the Russian disease called corruption.

  6. Reinis_LV on

    Welll, well, well. Corruption in Russia. What else is new.

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