Sytnyk states there have been unprecedented attempts to exert pressure on the NABU and destroy the agency together the Special Anti-corruption Prosecutor's Office.
Kholodnytsky says such court has long been a must.
Kyiv launched the wealth database for legislators and civil servants in 2016 in a bid to tackle graft that pleased Ukraine’s backers including the International Monetary Fund.
Sytnyk claims "no words can describe" the scale of corruption at Ukrainian state-owned enterprises.
Director of the National Anti-corruption Bureau Artem Sytnyk "felt that sooner or later there would be such a blast and counterattack that would actually cross out the past three years in Ukraine and cancel reforms that had been started, cross out possible international cooperation," that’s according to his interview with Voice of America, following critical statements in his address by Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko.
The Prosecutor General's Office of Ukraine (PGO) and the SBU Security Service of Ukraine have illegally interfered with an undercover special operation of the National Anti-corruption Bureau (NABU) aimed at identifying members of an organized criminal group in the State Migration Service of Ukraine.
It began with last month's shock detention of the interior minister's son in a corruption sting. Simmering animosity between Ukraine's law-enforcement bodies has since boiled over into a flurry of furious accusations and counter-claims, according to Bloomberg.
The Prosecutor General's Office (PGO) of Ukraine has opened criminal proceedings against Director of the National Anti-corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) Artem Sytnyk because of probable disclosure of investigation details, according to the Ukrainian news outlet Ukrayinska Pravda.