Ukraine’s Fight Against Corruption: Whistleblowing

Last Friday, July 7, some 50 civil society representatives, media personnel, and government policymakers spent the day discussing the law and practice of whistleblowing in Ukraine. They heard from among others National Anticorruption Prevention Committee (NAPC) officials explain how whistleblowing fit into the government’s anticorruption efforts, Anticorruption court Judge Oleksiy Kravchuk on measures for fostering respect for whistleblowers, and how the law protected Oleh Polishchuk after he blew the whistle on his employer’s corruption.

I spoke at the closing panel with TI Ukraine head Andrii Borovyk and Serhiy Derkach, Deputy Minister for Community, Territories and Infrastructure Development of Ukraine. The English version of the program is here and the slides I spoke from here. Minister Derkach’s closing remarks are below —

“Whistleblowing during the recovery process in Ukraine is even more important. It is not only about corruption but also about the security and efficiency of how funds and resources are used.

“There are three key conditions for whistleblowers to report wrongdoing:

✔️ Official channel for reporting
✔️ Confidence that the reports will be reviewed and the perpetrators brought to justice
✔️ Protection from retaliation by management

“At the Ministry of Renovation, we support a zero-tolerance culture towards corruption and are actively working to implement an effective compliance system.

Continue reading

Mitigating Corruption Risks in Ukrainian Reconstruction: Princeton University/Kyiv Anticorruption Research and Education Centre’s Joint Program

Princeton University’s Innovations for Successful Societies program and Kyiv’s Anticorruption Research and Education Centre are together helping the Ukrainian government fight corruption during reconstruction. Their first output is a four-day program that began today to share experiences elsewhere in curbing corruption in construction projects. Attending are frontline staff from the Ministry for Communities, Territories and Infrastructure Development, the State Agency for Reconstruction and Development, and other agencies and departments responsible for reconstruction.

Funded by the International Renaissance Foundation and USAID, Deputy Infrastructure Minister Serhiy Derkach opened the program. Princeton Professor Jenifer Widner, head of the Princeton program, Oskana Nesterenko, ACREC Executive Director, and representatives of AID and the Renaissance Foundation also spoke. Hamish Goldie-Scot, CoST Technical Director, and I will lead the discussions. The agenda is here, my opening remarks below.

Continue reading