International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde said today the abrupt resignation of Ukraine's reformist economy minister, who cited government corruption, was a troubling sign for its bailout program.
"His recently announced resignation is a concern," Lagarde said in an online news conference when questioned about the resignation of Aivaras Abromavicius yesterday in protest at alleged influence-peddling and state graft.
"If the allegations that he makes in his resignation are correct, then it's obviously an indication that the anti-corruption measures that were committed by the government are not yet working," the IMF managing director said.
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The Fund has a $17.5 billion rescue program for Ukraine on condition the government enacts economic reforms and fights corruption.
"There's more progress to be had in this area," Lagarde said.
"A lot of work needs to be done and it has to be implemented vigorously because the Ukrainian authorities are not only accountable to the Ukrainian people but also to the international community."
Western frustration has been fanned by the fact that Abromavicius is the fourth reform-minded minister to tender his resignation since Ukraine's 2014 revolution broke its ties with Russia and set it on a European course.
President Petro Poroshenko held last-ditch talks with the Lithuanian-born minister Wednesday in a bid to change his mind and reassure him that all his charges would be investigated in full.
But parliament began debating the 40-year-old's future in a tense session that saw one deputy raise the prospect of holding a vote of no confidence in the government as a whole.