A team of four special agents from the Federal Bureau of
Investigation arrived in Kyiv in April to help in the investigation
of the killing of Heorhiy Gongadze in September 2000. At a meeting
with the Prosecutor-General's Office, Deputy Prosecutor-General
Oleksiy Bahanets informed the agents that they will not be given
access to files or material evidence in the case, UNIAN reported on
12 April. On 16 April, the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv issued a press
release in which it stated:
"The Government of Ukraine invited a team of FBI experts in
homicide investigations to consult with Ukrainian investigators in
the Heorhiy Gongadze case."
"The team met with investigators in the Office of the
Procurator General, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the
Security Service of Ukraine."
"The objective of the FBI team was to exchange ideas on
methodology and strategies related to the Gongadze investigation. The
team was not here to conduct its own investigation. Unfortunately,
Ukrainian law enforcement officials asserted that Ukrainian law
prohibits sharing any information that is not in the public domain,
and said they were unable to discuss any aspects of the case, share
evidence, or conduct a joint site inspection. Because of this, the
FBI team could not provide suggestions that might help Ukrainian law
enforcement authorities advance the investigation of the murder of
Heorhiy Gongadze."
They were also told that they can, if they wish, interview
Yuriy Kravchenko, former head of the Ukraine's Interior Ministry, and
Leonid Derkach, head of the Ukrainian security service, who are both
forbidden by law from disclosing anything they know about the case.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
"Ukraine gives corruption a bad name." George Soros
(RFE/RL 19.iv.02)