person:alexander kvitashvili

  • Yatsenyuk: Several ministers to be dismissed within two weeks : UNIAN news
    http://www.unian.info/politics/1173265-yatsenyuk-several-ministers-to-be-dismissed-within-two-weeks.html

    In the next two weeks the Health Minister (Alexander Kvitashvili), Energy Minister (Volodymyr Demchyshyn) and Education Minister (Serhiy Kvit) will be dismissed, Ukraine’s Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said in an interview with Politico.

    In addition, the Prime Minister announced the introduction of a Deputy Prime Minister for European Integration, Politico reports.

    It’s too early to say who [will come into office], this could shatter the coalition,” he explained. “We are in talks with the president. But the quicker we announce the better.

    There have been mistakes,” Yatsenyuk admitted to Politico. “But I will correct these mistakes with new folks sitting in the cabinet.

    It should be noted that Health Minister Alexander Kvitashvili, submitted his resignation letter in early July, but the parliament did not approve his move.

  • Ukraine ‘ready to go’ in polio fight after outbreak scare, says health minister
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ukraine-ready-to-go-in-polio-fight-after-outbreak-scare-says-health-minist

    Ukrainian Health Minister Alexander Kvitashvili has sought to allay international concerns of a potential polio epidemic in the country after two cases of infection, promising an immediate immunization drive after weeks of delays.

    Speaking at a press conference in Kyiv on Oct. 9, Kvitashvili said the government was already “ready to go” with immunization efforts after an action plan was drawn up and a decree on the matter prepared the night before.

    Kvitashvili’s comments came in response to scathing international criticism after two documented cases of the polio virus in western Ukraine’s Zakarpattia Oblast in late August left two young children paralyzed – and warranted little to no reaction from authorities.

    It was the first case of the disease’s documentation in Europe since 2010, and it set off alarm bells throughout the international community.

    Ellyn Ogden of the United States Agency for International Development said those alarm bells should still be ringing, despite the Health Ministry’s action plan.

    Ogden expressed shock at the authorities’ delayed reaction to the situation, noting that “in the past, a confirmed case of polio would have gotten immediate attention.

    This time around, however, she said the response has been “inadequate” – so much so that the recent polio cases threaten to leave the country’s reputation with a “black eye.

    Ukraine went from 90% coverage a decade ago, to 14% today. This is one of the lowest coverages in the world, including countries at war and those facing security and economic challenges,” Ogden said.

    The two documented cases of the virus were vaccine-derived polio, meaning they could have been prevented if the population had a higher level of immunization.

    No other country in the world is in such a dire situation, or has shown such disregard for protecting children against childhood diseases,” Ogden said.

    It is now 45 days since the outbreak has been announced, and not a single child has been vaccinated,” Ogden said.

  • Pendant ce temps-là, en Ukraine…

    • démission de Kvitashvili, qui était, il y a 6 mois le futur sauveur du système de soins ukrainien
    • démission du ministre de l’Écologie, avec des relents d’hydrocarbures à la clé
    • tout cela dans des conditions opaques et une ambiance de bazar généralisé dans le « gouvernement »…

    In Ukraine, a political power struggle comes to a head | Europe | DW.COM | 04.07.2015
    http://www.dw.com/en/in-ukraine-a-political-power-struggle-comes-to-a-head/a-18561688

    Seven months after forming a coalition government in Ukraine, Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk lost two ministers in the space of a day. The first to go was Ecology and Natural Resources Minister Ihor Shevchenko. According to the government, a flight from Nice to Kyiv in a private jet with a controversial businessman was what tripped up the 44-year-old politician. Shevchenko himself vehemently denies any allegations of corruption. He was fired on July 2.

    Observers in Kyiv suspect that behind it all is a fight for political influence and access to natural resources, above all to natural gas. The Ukrainian media has described Shevchenko as having close ties to former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. She says that, although it participates in the ruling coalition in parliament, her party has no ministerial appointments. On Thursday, the influential Kyiv online news outlet “Ukrainska Pravda” wrote that, “the split in the coalition has become visible.

    Departure of the great Georgian hope
    The second departure created even more of a sensation: Alexander Kvitashvili of Georgia, one of three foreign-born ministers in Ukraine, was forced to step down from his post. On Tuesday, June 30, Ihor Kononenko, the acting parliamentary leader of Poroshenko’s BPP alliance announced, “We don’t have anything against the minister, but he can no longer lead this ministry.” He went on to say that the situation in the health ministry was “uncontrollable.” On Wednesday, Kvitashvili’s compatriot and Georgia’s former president, Mikheil Saakashvili, tossed more wood on the fire. Now governor of the southern Ukrainian region of Odessa, Saakashvili said, “I told him that it was time for him to go.” Indeed, Ukraine needs an “aggressive man” to fight corruption.

    Kvitashvili was brought in to reform Ukraine’s health system
    On Thursday, the president’s party tweeted that the health minister had turned in his resignation. But the ministry denied the claim. General confusion ensued in the media. It wasn’t until later that afternoon that Kvitashvili explained that he had in fact vacated his post. “When the alliance that invited me here mulls my resignation without consulting me, then the right thing to do is to go,” he told the press corps in Kyiv. Parliament agreed.

    Health care reform on paper
    This resignation had enormous symbolic power. Just six months ago, Kvitashvili had been celebrated as a figure of great hope. He was invited to Kyiv to radically reform the health care system. The man who had successfully introduced a health insurance program with western standards in Georgia was asked to do the same in Ukraine. At the beginning of the year, Kvitashvili estimated that bribes were costing the Ukrainian health care system between 8 and 10 billion US dollars annually (7-9 billion euros) - three times the ministry’s annual budget. “Doctors are simply stuffing this money in their pockets,” railed the minister.

    Kvitashvili did not manage to get much done during his brief tenure. He replaced all of the department heads in his ministry, did away with the opaque system of supplying medical drugs to state-run clinics and developed a plan for a fundamental overhaul of the health care system. He presented his plan to the government at the end of June. If and how it will be implemented is an open question after his de facto expulsion.

    Power play before bankruptcy?
    The dismissal of those two ministers is not the only sign of a rift within the governing coalition. Interior Minister Arsen Avakov and Defense Minister Stepan Poltorak have come under fire as well. At the end of June, caucus leader Yuriy Lutsenko said that the president’s party had asked the government to look into allegations of corruption against both of the ministers.

    Lutsenko himself surprised everyone by also announcing his own resignation on Thursday. Long seen as a close advisor to the president, he is also his party’s chairman. There is currently much speculation as to the reasons behind his resignation.

  • Le gouvernement ukrainien consacre toute son énergie à faire avancer les réformes…

    • Ministre de la santé (ex-géorgien) Kvitashvili
    Quatrième mission d’enquête parlementaire en 6 mois : « ils auraient au moins pu attendre les conclusions de la précédente »

    Poroshenko’s faction wants to oust Kvitashvili, Ukraine’s health minister ; he slams critics for financial self-interest
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/poroshenkos-faction-calls-for-resignation-of-kvitashvili-ukraines-health-m

    The parliamentary faction of President Petro Poroshenko’s bloc accuses Health Minister Alexander Kvitashvili of failing to conduct reforms and wants him to resign. The president’s bloc, with 144 members, is the largest faction among the 422 lawmakers in office.

    Ihor Kononeko, the deputy head of the faction, announced the decision on June 30.

    Kvitashvili, appointed six months ago, is outraged by the attempt to oust him, saying that the accusations against him are driven by the financial self-interests of those who would lose money if his changes come into law.

    Some don’t need reforms, some need what has been in place for the last 25 years – silent budget embezzlement,” Kvitashvili told a press conference the same day.

    The minister said his team has succeeded in changing the whole system of state purchases of medicine, an historic source of corruption through non-competitive procurement, inflated prices and kickbacks.

    He said he did this despite the lack of support in Parliament.

    But he claims he has the support of the Cabinet of Ministers and Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who earlier this month gave Kvitashvili three months to make improvements that Ukrainians would notice.

    Yatsenyuk also granted a request by lawmakers to investigate him, the fourth such probe of his activities this year, Kvitashvili said. “They could have at least waited for the investigation results on July 10,” he said.

    • • le Ministre de l’écologie : Iatseniouk bloque toute réforme et place ses pions, en particulier dans les instances anti-corruption

      Shevchenko : Yatsenyuk should not be Ukraine’s prime minister
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/shevchenko-yatsenyuk-should-not-be-ukraines-prime-minister-392386.html

      Whether he survives as Ukraine’s minister of ecology and natural resources or not, Igor Shevchenko wants the world to know his opinion about who is blocking major reforms in Ukraine today: Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

      The prime minister is the biggest brake and obstacle to reforms in this country,” Shevchenko told the Kyiv Post on June 28 during an interview in his office in Kyiv.

      Shevchenko this month refused Yatsenyuk’s demand that he resign – what he called the prime minister’s fifth attempt to fire him during his six months in office. He says it is Yatsenyuk who should resign.

      Ukraine deserves a better prime minister than the guy who is doing all these manipulations,” Shevchenko said. “He’s not a reformer. He’s a pseudo-reformer. He’s playing. He’s doing nothing. He blocks appointments of ministers of the presidential team. He is not guided by the public interest and the country’s interest, but by his own interests and the interests of his business partners and political allies.
      […]
      One of the latest blowouts between Yatsenyuk and Shevchenko took place after Shevchenko publicly protested the appointments of four members of a selection committee to the National Agency for Prevention of Corruption, a graft-fighting institution created to verify the income and asset disclosures of public officials.
      […]
      Shevchenko said it appears that Yatsenyuk simply wants to control the agency and who it investigates, thereby subverting the anti-corruption fight

      He said that Yatsenyuk’s deputy minister of the Cabinet of Ministers, a 600-employee apparatus under the control of the prime minister, didn’t even want to give him the biographical information about the four candidates.

      This dispute, however, was just the latest one between Yatsenyuk and Shevchenko.

      Yatsenyuk demanded me to write a letter of resignation four times during meetings of the Cabinet,” Shevchenko said. “I refused.

    • • dans les services secrets les accusations de participation active à l’ancien régime se succèdent les unes aux autres ; la dernière (?) en date

      Top security officials accused of links to Yanukovych, Kremlin
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv-post-plus/top-security-officials-accused-of-links-to-yanukovych-kremlin-392125.html

      Newly appointed top officials of the Security Service of Ukraine, or SBU, have been accused of having ties to ousted President Viktor Yanukovuych’s regime and supporting Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

      The accusations have been denied by the SBU. The appointments, made earlier this week, followed the resignation of SBU Chief Valentyn Nalyvaichenko and the selection of Vasyl Hrytsak as the agency’s acting head last week. Vasyl Hrytsak’s son, Oleh, has come under fire for allegedly prosecuting EuroMaidan activists in January 2014, according to Channel 5 footage – a claim that the SBU denies.

      While the SBU’s supporters argue that the agency has changed since the 2013-2014 EuroMaidan Revolution and become patriotic, critics describe it as a leftover of the Soviet Union’s State Security Committee, or KGB. It has also been accused of perpetuating the practices of the Yanukovych regime after its downfall and of being infiltrated by Russian spies.

      • le 19 juin, Porochenko appelait à une purge
      Poroshenko expects acting SBU head to dismiss senior security officials
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/poroshenko-expects-acting-sbu-head-to-dismiss-senior-security-officials-39

      Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, during a meeting with the heads of law enforcement agencies and institutions, said that by the end of June 19 he expects acting head of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) Vasyl Hrutsak to submit proposals for the dismissal of a number of senior security officials.

      • le 27 juin, arrestation du responsable régional de Kiev pour haute trahison au profit de la Russie

      SBU informs one of SBU heads in Kyiv city and region detained on high treason charges
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine-abroad/sbu-informs-one-of-sbu-heads-in-kyiv-city-and-region-detained-on-high-trea

      The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) has detained one of the heads of the chief department of SBU in Kyiv city and region on the charges of high treason in favor of intelligence services of Russia (Article 111 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine – high treason).

      Acting SBU Head Vasyl Hrytsak said that the work to purify intelligence services continues.

    • • idem pour la Justice, chaque nomination de procureur déclenche les mêmes séquences

      Appointment of prosecutor tied to pro-Russian party prompts backlash
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv-post-plus/appointment-of-prosecutor-tied-to-pro-russian-party-prompts-backlash-video

      The appointment of a top prosecutor linked to Viktor Medvedvchuk, Ukraine’s pro-Russian politician par excellence, has prompted a flurry of indignation in civil society.

      Maksym Yakobovsky was selected as the southern district’s top prosecutor in March, and his ties to Medvedchuk’s Ukrainian Choice party were revealed earlier this month. Critics cite the appointment as proof that Ukrainian authorities are refusing to lustrate officials associated with ousted President Viktor Yanukovych or the Kremlin.