Ukraine appoints new prosecutor general

Ukraine's parliament on Tuesday appointed Ruslan Kravchenko, one of the key investigators of alleged Russian war crimes during the occupation of the Kyiv region in 2022, as prosecutor general. (X/@Hromadske)
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Updated 17 June 2025
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Ukraine appoints new prosecutor general

  • Kravchenko, 35, is now head of the state tax administration
  • The prosecutor general’s post has remained vacant since October

KYIV: Ukraine’s parliament on Tuesday appointed Ruslan Kravchenko, one of the key investigators of alleged Russian war crimes during the occupation of the Kyiv region in 2022, as prosecutor general.

Kravchenko, 35, is now head of the state tax administration, and before that chaired the Kyiv region military administration.

He was involved in the recording and prosecuting of alleged Russian atrocities in the town of Bucha, which was occupied for 33 days in the early stages of Moscow’s full-scale invasion. Russia denies accusations of numerous executions, rapes and torture during the occupation.

Kravсhenko was also a prosecutor in Ukraine’s ousted President Viktor Yanukovych’s treason case.

The prosecutor general’s post has remained vacant since October, after Andriy Kostin resigned following a scandal around officials receiving fake disability status and avoiding military service.


UK secures migrant return deal with Angola, Namibia; DRC faces visa curbs

Updated 28 December 2025
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UK secures migrant return deal with Angola, Namibia; DRC faces visa curbs

LONDON: Angola and Namibia have agreed to accept the ​return of illegal migrants and criminals after the British government threatened visa penalties for countries refusing to cooperate, the UK Home Office said late on Saturday.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has ‌been stripped ‌of fast-track visa services ‌and ⁠preferential ​treatment ‌for VIPs and decision-makers after failing to meet Britain’s requirements to improve cooperation, the Home Office said.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said Britain could escalate measures to a complete halting of visas ⁠for the DRC unless “co-operation rapidly improves.”
“We ‌expect countries to play ‍by the rules. ‍If one of their citizens has ‍no right to be here, they must take them back,” the Home Secretary added.

The agreements mark the first major ​change under reforms announced last month to make refugee status temporary ⁠and speed up the deportation of those who arrive illegally in Britain.
Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the UK has “removed more than 50,000 people with no right to remain” since July last year, a 23 percent increase on the previous period, and instructed diplomats to make returns a ‌top priority.