Ukraine "Corrupt at All Levels" - Says Former EU Commission Chief Juncker
By: Tyler Durden
October 8. 2023: Ukraine is not ready to join the EU due to its being "corrupt at all levels of society," Jean-Claude Juncker, the former European Commission president, said in unusually blunt statements to Germany’s Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper this week.
He also chastised current European officials for giving Ukrainians "false promises" over the future of their EU candidacy, saying that being admitted to the bloc would be "neither good for the EU nor for Ukraine."
"Anyone who has had anything to do with Ukraine knows that this is a country that is corrupt at all levels of society. Despite its efforts, it is not ready for accession; it needs massive internal reform processes," he said.
"You shouldn’t make false promises to the people in Ukraine who are up to their necks in suffering," he explained. Juncker further emphasized, "I am very angry about some voices in Europe who are telling Ukrainians that they can become members immediately."
The reform process and waves of European law packages countries are expected to adopt before they can hope to enter typically takes years or realistically over a decade.
Ukraine has long ranked as the most corrupt country in Europe and among the top in the world. US and European media have increasingly acknowledged this of late, and Juncker's sudden boldness could be due to the general increase in press coverage of the issue.
Earlier this week, Ukrainian lawmaker Yaroslav Zheleznyak, first deputy chairman of the parliament committee on finance, admitted that corruption is a major issue which has played a part in the withholding of external aid, also in the wake of successful GOP-led efforts in Congress to strip Ukraine defense aid out of the stopgap bill.
"The biggest (public) complaint about us is corruption," Zheleznyak conceded in a Sunday social media post. "We have to go through these 45 days without a major corruption scandal," he stated. This comes even after Zelensky in the last two months fired a range of top officials, including his longtime defense minister and a half-dozen other top defense officials.
Ukrainian corruption has been featured as a talking point among those Republicans saying "no more" blank checks or continually flowing aid to Ukraine, especially at a moment Americans are struggling with inflation, rising grocery costs, and affordable housing.
Given outside aid threatens to dry up at this point, Ukraine has said it is "ambitiously" working to pass reforms. "We have conducted these reforms initiated by Ukraine with the help and support from the US, EU and other friends," a government statement given to CNN this week said. "And their practical support to our Cabinet of ministers as well as our (National Bank of Ukraine), General Prosecutors office and anticorruption agencies is appreciated and valued…In all our obligations with IMF, EU and other international donors as well as USA, Ukraine delivers on this front."
Source: ZeroHedge
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