Home of former deputy head of Zelenskyy’s office searched by German police – POLITICO

He held the post until September of last year, when his dismissal was announced ahead of a major reshuffle of Zelenskyy’s Cabinet. He relocated to the Bavarian town of Starnberg shortly thereafter.

According to Ukrainska Pravda, reports of the NABU-requested search of Shurma’s home angered the Ukrainian president, who objected to the “international scale” its investigations were taking. The publication claimed the development was a major factor in Zelenskyy’s decision to sign a controversial law placing the anti-corruption agency under executive control earlier this month.

The legislation, which gave the country’s presidentially-appointed prosecutor general direct authority over the NABU and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office, prompted thousands of demonstrators to take to the streets of Kyiv in protest and led leaders in Brussels to warn Zelenskyy that he was putting Ukraine’s EU ambitions in jeopardy.

Chastened by the reactions to the legislation, Zelenskyy sped a bill returning independence to the agencies through the country’s parliament and signed it into law this past Thursday.

NABU has charged 71 current and former Ukrainian MPs with corruption and has not shied away from investigating members of Zelenskyy’s inner circle.

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