You're reading: Oppositionist Avakov to return to Ukraine

Former Governor of Kharkiv region Arsen Avakov, who was elected as people's deputy of Ukraine to the Verkhovna Rada of the seventh convocation, is to return to Ukraine on Tuesday.

A posting on the Web site of the Batkivschyna Party reads that
Avakov’s plane will arrive at Terminal D of Kyiv’s Boryspil
International Airport at 1325.

Batkivschyna members will meet him at the airport.

It was reported earlier that Avakov had been charged on January 31,
2012 with “abuse of office leading to serious consequences” through
unlawfully expropriating 55 hectares of land near the village of
Pisochyn in Kharkiv region and changing its status. He was also declared
internationally wanted, and the Chervonozavodsky District Court in
Kharkiv granted an investigator’s request on sanctioning his arrest.

Reports of Avakov’s detention in Frosinone, Italy, were confirmed on
March 27. After that, the leadership of Batkivschyna sent letters to the
Interpol secretary-general and the Italian government, asking them to
take into consideration “the obvious political motives” behind Avakov’s
criminal prosecution, and to release him. A Rome court ruled to release
Avakov from custody on April 12.

Avakov led Kharkiv Regional State Administration from February 2005 until February 2010.

He ran for mayor of Kharkiv in the autumn of 2010. He took second
place, losing to the winner of the mayoral election, Hennadiy Kernes, by
a margin of 0.63%.

In Ukraine’s parliamentary elections on October 28, Avakov was
elected an MP on the list of the Batkivschyna Party (No. 24 on the
list). He said that he would return to Ukraine immediately after the
decision on his election as an MP by the CEC is published. On November
23, the CEC registered Avakov as an MP.