Citat:
Ok då hade man inte tillräckligt på fötterna för att haffa honom internationellt. Ett bra fungerande rättsväsende är alltid bra. Men i Ukraina väntar utan tvivel en kal cell på forne presidenten eftersom man har bevis i massor på omfattande korruption i den högsta divisionen. Så han får nog fortsätta vara Putins gäst resten av sin jordiska vandring.
Att få "bakläxa" från Interpol (och även från ICC) är bevis på att ukrainska rättssystemet inte fungerar, ränt av klantskallar hela bunten. Uppenbarligen saknas "bevis" (mot Y), annars hade skickats med, det är det som saknats!!
Ett annat exempel på Ukraina och även EU-s klantighet är "frysta" tillgångar för personer från förra regeringen (fem personer, inklusive Yanucovich döde son har bortplockats från lista, det finns ytterligare en artikel om detta):
Citat:
(min fetning)
EU judges have said member states had no legal grounds to impose an asset freeze on a Ukrainian former regime member, in a ruling which puts in doubt other listings.
The bloc’s General Court, in Luxembourg, on Monday (26 October) “set aside” the EU decision, last March, to seize the funds of Andriy Portnov, a former aide to Ukraine's ousted leader Viktor Yanukovych.
It said the freeze was imposed “solely on the basis of a letter of 3 March 2014 from the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Ukraine, which stated that the investigation into, amongst others, Mr Portnov, had ‘made it possible to establish misappropriation of sizeable amounts of state funds’.”
It added that “on that basis … the inclusion of Mr Portnov’s name on the list does not satisfy the criteria for designating persons”.
Kalman Mizsei, the head of the EU’s rule of law mission in Kiev, Euam Ukraine, told EUobserver in an interview last month the prosecutor’s office still resembles an organised crime syndicate.
“There’s still no concept of public service. There’s widespread buying and selling of positions”, he said.
“The prosecution is the backbone of the old system. It’s vital to clean it up, to reduce its power, and to make it respectable”.
https://euobserver.com/foreign/130854
The bloc’s General Court, in Luxembourg, on Monday (26 October) “set aside” the EU decision, last March, to seize the funds of Andriy Portnov, a former aide to Ukraine's ousted leader Viktor Yanukovych.
It said the freeze was imposed “solely on the basis of a letter of 3 March 2014 from the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Ukraine, which stated that the investigation into, amongst others, Mr Portnov, had ‘made it possible to establish misappropriation of sizeable amounts of state funds’.”
It added that “on that basis … the inclusion of Mr Portnov’s name on the list does not satisfy the criteria for designating persons”.
Kalman Mizsei, the head of the EU’s rule of law mission in Kiev, Euam Ukraine, told EUobserver in an interview last month the prosecutor’s office still resembles an organised crime syndicate.
“There’s still no concept of public service. There’s widespread buying and selling of positions”, he said.
“The prosecution is the backbone of the old system. It’s vital to clean it up, to reduce its power, and to make it respectable”.
https://euobserver.com/foreign/130854