Anti-corruption investigations in Ukraine show that the country’s institutions remain efficient despite Russia's war, Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Taras Kachka told Euronews.
Kachka, who’s in charge of the country’s EU integration, described the process as “the healthiest thing” in the country of some 44 million, which continues to defend itself from Russia's all-out invasion, now well into its fifth year.
"Ukraine is now living through the war and the dramatic change of its political culture," he said in an interview on Tuesday.
"Something that was a problem for the accession of Ukraine in the past, so 10 years ago, 15 years ago. So corruption, systemic corruption, is now very dramatically and fast going into the past."
Major anti-graft probes have recently sent shockwaves throughout Ukraine.








