The text messages of “Servant of the People” MPs that surfaced in media reports prior to the vote revealed the biggest fraction in the Verkhovna Rada had been instructed not to vote for the resolution.
‘We are failing the Poroshenko’s probe on Wanger mercenaries and are voting for ours. It is important because it needs only 150 votes. It is important not to miss with it’, said one of the revealed text messages.
Before the vote, ‘European Solidarity’ leader Petro Poroshenko called the MPs to support the parliamentary probe on failed Wagner mercenaries capture.
‘For over a year, the one-party majority of MPs fails to name their representatives [for such commission], hampering parliamentary investigation, and, de-facto, siding with our enemy. I was shocked when journalists made public instructions from the President’s Office commanding their party MPs not to vote for this temporary investigation commission and [instead] to vote for ‘gambling’ [scheme] that will pilfer 750 million and this is a bribe. When did the parliament suffer humiliation like this? We should not protect a ‘mole’ among out top officials who initially denied the fact that such operation had ever happened. I, as the fifth president and former Commander-in-chief, had to disclose the information that it was me who sanctioned cooperation with our international partners who called it a brilliant operation of Ukrainian intelligence service [..] You don’t need to be afraid that some official of the government can suffer. You need to be afraid that Ukrane can suffer for it,” said Petro Poroshenko.
The ‘Servant of the People’ MPs are just ‘pushing for their own commission’, said he.
Unsurprisingly, his calls found little support from the ruling party MPs.
What did the proposed probe assume?
The parliament was proposed to set up a commission to look into details of the failed ‘Wagner mercenaries’ capture operation.
The commission planned to be made up of “Golos’, “Batkivshchyna’, and ‘European Soldarity’ MPs would launch a one-year investigation into the case, with the first findings to be reported on in 3 months’ time.
What we know about ‘Wagner mercenaries’ capture operation
In late April, Belarus law-enforcement agencies reported arrests of 33 ‘Wagner’ paramilitary group members in Minsk who allegedly arrived in the country to ‘destabilize the situation before the elections’.
The journalist Yuriy Butusov and “Ukrainska Pravda’ news site informed that the Ukrainian intelligence service agencies were planning an own capture plan for the mercenaries earlier detained in Minsk.
According to media reports, the secret operation had been in works for a year and was supposed to lure the Wagner mercenaries to Venezuela offering to employ their services for oil rigs protection. In return, the Wagner group members would provide evidence on their ‘presence’ and ‘unlawful’ acts in Ukrainian Donbas.
Chief Intelligence Directorate head Vasyl Burba and SBU deputy head Ruslan Banaretsky reported to the president’s office on the upcoming plan. The confidental information was reportedly made known to president Volodymyr Zelensky, his top aide Andriy Yermak , Intelligence Committee chair Ruslan Demchenko, and President’s Office deputy head Roman Mashovets. The plan subsequently stalled after Zelensky’s top aide Andriy Yermak asked to put it off citing problems with a planned prison exchange.
In a few days time, the scheme suffered a complete failure after the Wagner mercenaries’ group arrest in Minsk.
Ukrainian intelligence professionals cite leaks from the Zelensky top officials as a probable cause for the operation failure.