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Arsenal miss chance to stretch lead in Liverpool stalemate
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Stocks mixed as traders await US jobs data, oil rebounds
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After Minneapolis shooting, AI fabrications of victim and shooter
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Trump says no pardon for Sean 'Diddy' Combs
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Venezuela begins 'large' prisoner release amid US pressure
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Real Madrid beat Atletico to set up Clasico Spanish Super Cup final
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Heavy wind, rain, snow batters Europe
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PSG beat Marseille on penalties to win French Champions Trophy
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From sci-fi to sidewalk: exoskeletons go mainstream
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Rare genius dogs learn vocabulary by eavesdropping: study
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EU orders Musk's Grok AI to keep data after nudes outcry
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Venezuela announces release of 'large number' of prisoners
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Rare gorilla twins born in conflict-hit DR Congo nature park
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Dolphins fire head coach McDaniel after four seasons
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Three ships head to US with Venezuela oil as capacity concerns grow
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Trump says US could run Venezuela and its oil for years
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Heavy wind, rain, snow to batter Europe
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Morocco coach Regragui aims to shift pressure to Cameroon before AFCON clash
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HRW warns right to protest 'under attack' in UK
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French farmers rage against EU-Mercosur trade deal
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Humanoid robots go for knockout in high-tech Vegas fight night
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Brazil's Lula vetoes law reducing Bolsonaro's sentence
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Macron accuses US of 'turning away' from allies, breaking rules
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Joshua pays tribute to close friends killed in crash
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Protesters, US law enforcement clash after immigration officer kills woman
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French ex-spy chief cops suspended jail term for 15 mn euro shakedown
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Syria bombs Kurdish areas in city of Aleppo
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Confusion reigns over Venezuela's oil industry as US looms
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Stocks retrench as traders eye geopolitics, US jobs data
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US trade gap shrinks to smallest since 2009 as imports fall
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Russia releases French researcher in prisoner exchange
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Spain signs agreement with Church to compensate abuse victims
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Macron accuses US of 'breaking free from international rules'
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US could run Venezuela, tap its oil for years, Trump says
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England to stick with Stokes and McCullum despite Ashes flop
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Nobel laureate Bialiatski tells AFP 'important' to keep pressure on Belarus
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Russia slams Western peacekeeping plan for Ukraine
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Bordeaux's Du Preez wary of Northampton's Champions Cup revenge mission
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Romero apologises for Spurs slump as crisis deepens
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Former Premier League referee Coote gets suspended sentence for indecent image
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New clashes hit Iran as opposition urges protests, strikes
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Stocks retreat as traders eye geopolitics, US jobs data
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'Girl with a Pearl Earring' to be shown in Japan, in rare trip abroad
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Syria tells civilians to leave Aleppo's Kurdish areas
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'Sign of life': defence boom lifts German factory orders
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Japan's Fast Retailing raises profit forecast after China growth
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Olympic champion Zheng out of Australian Open
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England's Brook 'deeply sorry' for nightclub fracas
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New clashes in Iran as opposition urges more protests
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Equity markets mostly down as traders eye US jobs data
Zelenskyy anti-graft gamble
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy entered office as the public face of a reformist wave, yet today he stands accused of dismantling the very anti-corruption architecture that underpinned his legitimacy. On 22 July Ukraine’s parliament fast-tracked amendments that place the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO) under the effective control of the prosecutor general, a political appointee answerable to the presidency.
The new law empowers the prosecutor general to reassign high-profile graft cases “when circumstances make NABU’s work impossible,” a clause critics describe as a licence for political interference. Within hours Zelenskyy signalled support, calling the changes a wartime necessity—only to trigger the largest street protests in Kyiv since the first months of the invasion. Demonstrators draped parliament with banners warning of a return to pre-revolution impunity and chanting “EU or bust,” a reference to Brussels’ demand that Kyiv maintain independent watchdogs as a core accession pre-condition.
Financial stakes rose immediately. The European Commission privately told Kyiv that up to €18 billion in macro-financial aid could be frozen unless the rollback is reversed, while several donor governments paused disbursement of recovery funds earmarked for 2025-26. Foreign investors, already wary of doing business in a war zone, saw bond yields spike to a three-month high as rating agencies flagged “governance slippage”.
Domestically, the chill reached law-enforcement corridors. NABU agents reported surprise searches of their offices by state-security operatives, officially justified as a hunt for “foreign infiltration.” Anti-graft officials countered that the raids aimed to seize case files implicating influential wartime contractors.
Under pressure, Zelenskyy invited agency heads and civic groups to negotiate a face-saving compromise. Yet even a cosmetic fix may not repair the reputational damage: polls released this week show confidence in the president’s anti-corruption agenda falling below 40 percent for the first time since 2022. Meanwhile, NABU’s most sensitive investigations—ranging from drone-procurement fraud to embezzlement in frontline logistics—remain in limbo, jeopardising both battlefield efficiency and public morale.
Analysts warn that weakening the investigative firewall could hard-wire patronage into Ukraine’s post-war reconstruction boom. Billions in future EU and World Bank contracts risk flowing through a system perceived to be politically captured, raising the prospect of donor fatigue at a moment when Kyiv’s fiscal gap already exceeds 20 percent of GDP. What began as a procedural tweak is thus morphing into a strategic gamble: Zelenskyy can retreat and reassure partners—or press ahead and test whether Ukraine’s allies will prioritise unity against Moscow over governance standards at home. Either path will define his presidency long after the guns fall silent.
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