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Israel to 'take control' of Gaza City after approving new war plan
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Australian A-League side Western United stripped of licence
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'Back home': family who fled front buried after Kyiv strike
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Indonesia cracks down on pirate protest flag
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Israeli army will 'take control' of Gaza City: PM's office
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Australian mushroom murderer accused of poisoning husband
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Coventry's mettle tested by Russian Olympic debate, say former IOC figures
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Library user borrows rare Chinese artwork, returns fakes: US officials
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Parisians hot under the collar over A/C in apartments
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Crypto group reportedly says it planned sex toy tosses at WNBA games
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American Shelton tops Khachanov to win first ATP Masters title in Toronto
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Tokyo soars on trade deal relief as Asian markets limp into weekend
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New species teem in Cambodia's threatened karst
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Australian mushroom murderer accused of poisoning husband: police
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Solid gold, royal missives and Nobel noms: how to win Trump over
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Canadian teen Mboko outlasts Osaka to win WTA Montreal crown
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Trump to host Armenia, Azerbaijan for historic 'Peace Signing'
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Israeli airline's Paris offices daubed with red paint, slogans
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US raises bounty on Venezuela's Maduro to $50 mn
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Lebanon cabinet meets again on Hezbollah disarmament
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Bolivia right-wing presidential hopeful vows 'radical change'
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Trump says would meet Putin without Zelensky sit-down
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Trump offers data to justify firing of labor stats chief
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Bhatia leads by one at PGA St. Jude, Scheffler five adrift
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Disney settles Trump-supporting 'Star Wars' actor lawsuit
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Trump moves to kill $7 billion in solar panel grants
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Venus Williams falls at first hurdle in Cincinnati
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Mixed day for global stocks as latest Trump levies take effect
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SpaceX agrees to take Italian experiments to Mars
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US judge orders temporary halt to new 'Alligator Alcatraz' construction
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US uses war rhetoric, Superman to recruit for migrant crackdown
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US to rewrite its past national climate reports
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WHO says nearly 100,000 struck with cholera in Sudan
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Huge wildfire in southern France now under control
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Kane scores as Bayern thump Spurs in pre-season friendly
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France strikes down return of banned bee-killing pesticide
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Canada sends troops to eastern province as fire damage grows
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OpenAI releases ChatGPT-5 as AI race accelerates
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Plastic pollution treaty talks deadlocked
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A French sailor's personal 'Plastic Odyssey'
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Netanyahu says Israel to control not govern Gaza
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Partey signs for Villarreal while on bail for rape charges
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Wales have the talent to rise again, says rugby head coach Tandy
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US partners seek relief as Trump tariffs upend global trade
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Five England players nominated for women's Ballon d'Or
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PSG dominate list of men's Ballon D'Or nominees
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Americans eating (slightly) less ultra-processed food
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Man Utd agree 85m euro deal to sign Sesko: reports
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France to rule on controversial bee-killing pesticide bill
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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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