Ukrainian MP expelled over trip to Thailand

Ukrainian MP expelled over trip to Thailand

Lawmaker says 'official' visit was approved by party leaders but parliament speaker says otherwise

A video posted on social media by Ukrainian MP Mykola Tyshchenko showed that his visit to Thailand was not all work, but that upset his fellow parliamentarians.
A video posted on social media by Ukrainian MP Mykola Tyshchenko showed that his visit to Thailand was not all work, but that upset his fellow parliamentarians.

KYIV: Ukraine’s ruling party has kicked out a lawmaker from its parliamentary faction after reports that he had travelled to Thailand during the grinding war with Russia sparked a public outcry.

Party spokesperson Yulia Paliychuk said on Friday that Mykola Tyshchenko was expelled from the voting bloc of the Servant of the People party after an announcement appeared briefly on the website of the Ukrainian embassy in Thailand saying Tyshchenko would meet members of the Ukrainian diaspora at a hotel in Bangkok.

Tyshchenko said on Facebook he had been on a business trip in Asia with approval of party leaders, “acting exclusively in the interests of Ukraine”. Parliament Speaker Ruslan Stefanchuk said he had approved no such trip.

The trip was not all work, but when Tyshchenko posted a video of himself swimming at a beach, it did not sit well with some people back home.

The winter visit to sun-soaked Southeast Asia comes amid a crackdown by President Volodymyr Zelensky aimed at projecting an image of greater accountability for officials.

More than a dozen senior officials were fired or resigned this week, including a deputy prosecutor who had come under fire in the press for a holiday in Spain, in the biggest shakeup of the Kyiv leadership since the war began.

Zelensky has announced a ban this week on private trips abroad by officials. Most Ukrainian men aged 18-60 have already been barred from leaving the country under martial law since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in Februrary last year.

Tyshchenko is no stranger to controversy. The owner of several fancy Kyiv restaurants, he also got into trouble during the Covid-19 pandemic, the Kyiv Post reported.

Despite a ban on the operation of restaurants during the lockdown, Tyshchenko’s restaurants never stopped operating. He also used to hold secret parties involving his close friends, businessmen, oligarchs, and Ukrainian lawmakers, the newspaper said.


Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (3)

Janjaem makes final after Algerian boxer disqualified

NEW DELHI: Thailand's Janjaem Suwannapheng will contest the gold medal bout at the women's world championships in New Delhi after Algeria's Imane Khelif was disqualified hours after she failed to meet the eligibility criteria, the International Boxing Association (IBA) said on Sunday.

18:48

Kyiv says Russia took Minsk 'hostage' with tactical nukes plan

KYIV, Ukraine: Kyiv on Sunday said Russia took Minsk as a "nuclear hostage" after President Vladimir Putin announced the deployment of tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus, bringing the arms to a country at the gates of the European Union.

17:45

2 Vietnamese trawlers, 11 crewmen seized off Songkhla

SONGKHLA: Two Vietnamese trawlers with 11 crewmen on board were detained on Saturday for illegally fishing in Thai territorial waters, marine police said.

17:26