You're reading: Tymoshenko’s defense lawyer: Ukraine made no guarantees for UESU’s obligations to Russia’s Defense Ministry

KHARKIV – There are no state guarantees on the obligations of the United Energy Systems of Ukraine Corporation to the Defense Ministry of the Russian Federation, according to the defense lawyer of former Ukrainian premier Yulia Tymoshenko, Serhiy Vlasenko.

“There are no guarantees of the Ukrainian state for the UESU’s
obligations to the Defense Ministry… If the Justice Ministry does not
know this, I have to inform them that government guarantees are included
by finance ministries in the state budget,” Vlasenko told reporters on
Monday near Central Clinical Hospital No. 5 in Kharkiv, where his client
is undergoing treatment.

According to him, should there be such guarantees, then all these 16
years, these guarantees would be taken into account in the state budgets
of the Russian Federation and Ukraine.

“These budgets are approved by parliaments and fulfilled by finance
ministries. If these guarantees existed, then for sure, Russia would
have already made such claims to Ukraine, and would not silently wait
for 16 years,” the lawyer said.

As reported, the Russian Defense Ministry filed at Kyiv Economic
Court a lawsuit against the Ukrainian government for the non-payment of Hr 3.239 billion under a criminal case on the activities of the United
Energy Systems of Ukraine (UESU) Corporation.

Russia demanded the summoning of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine
and the State Treasury Service of Ukraine as defendants in the case. The
UESU is the third party on the side of the defendant in the case.

Meanwhile, a district court in Kharkiv is hearing the criminal case
against former Ukrainian Premier Yulia Tymoshenko on the activities of
the UESU. The Prosecutor General’s Office of Ukraine (PGO) has filed a
lawsuit against Tymoshenko with the demand that she pay Hr 19.5 million
under the UESU case. Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka said
that the UESU case against Tymoshenko was illegally closed in 2005 under
pressure from former Ukrainian President Viktor Yuschenko, following
the appointment of Tymoshenko as prime minister.

Ukraine’s United Opposition said it believes that the reports about
the UESU’s debt to the Russian Defense Ministry are the attempt by the
authorities to discredit Tymoshenko on the eve of the parliamentary
elections.

The Justice Ministry will defend Ukraine’s interests in court.