Ukraine's youngest PM replaced as president seeks 'new brains'
CGTN
Share
Copied
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy delivers a speech during a parliamentary session, Kiev, Ukraine, March 4, 2020. /Reuters
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy delivers a speech during a parliamentary session, Kiev, Ukraine, March 4, 2020. /Reuters
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskiy ousted Oleksiy Honcharuk as prime minister after just six months in a reshuffle on Wednesday, saying that "new brains and new hearts" were required to revive the economy and tackle corruption.
The shake-up threw Ukraine's commitment to reforms into focus at a time when it is trying to finalize a new loan program with the International Monetary Fund that is seen as crucial to economic stability and investor confidence.
Denys Shymgal, who was nominated as the candidate for the post of Ukrainian prime minister, in a parliamentary session, Kiev, Ukraine, March 4, 2020. /Reuters
Denys Shymgal, who was nominated as the candidate for the post of Ukrainian prime minister, in a parliamentary session, Kiev, Ukraine, March 4, 2020. /Reuters
At a special parliament session, lawmakers voted to accept the resignation of Honcharuk and Denys Shymgal, who vowed to revise the 2020 budget, cut the salaries of ministers and some officials, will replace him.
"Yes, indeed, this is the first government where there is no high-level corruption. But not stealing is not enough. This is a government of new faces, but faces are not enough," Zelenskiy said. "New brains and new hearts are needed."
The changes started when Zelenskiy came to the stage, who was elected last year as an outsider who would bring new faces to politics.
Ukraine's Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk speaks during a news briefing in the village of Novi Sanzhary in Poltava region, Ukraine, February 20, 2020. /Reuters
Ukraine's Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk speaks during a news briefing in the village of Novi Sanzhary in Poltava region, Ukraine, February 20, 2020. /Reuters
Zelenskiy said that internal conflicts within his team had prevented it from working effectively though no official explanation was immediately given for the dismissal.
Honcharuk,35, is Ukraine's youngest and most short-lived prime minister since independence in 1991. He submitted his resignation for a second time after reports that Zelenskiy might be gearing up to sack him at the end of February.
Shymgal, 44, who was deputy prime minister in Honcharuk's cabinet, used to head the western Ivano-Frankivsk region.