Ukraine seizes stakes in ‘strategic’ companies for war effort
The Ukrainian government says it has invoked wartime laws to
take control of stakes in several “strategically important” companies in order
to guarantee sufficient supplies for its military to fend off the invasion of
Russia.
Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov on Monday announced the
requisition of a leading engine maker and four other energy and manufacturing
enterprises from some of the country’s richest men.
He did not elaborate on the size of the stakes that had been
taken over but said the assets of the five companies would be managed by his
ministry to meet “urgent” military needs.
“This is about providing fuel and lubricants, repairing
military equipment and weapons,” Reznikov told a news conference, alongside
Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal and Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s
national security and defence council.
There was no immediate comment by any of the five companies.
During the conference, Shmyhal said the companies being
taken under state control make products or provide services that are “critical”
for Ukraine’s defence and energy needs.
“These enterprises must operate 24 hours a day, seven days a
week for the needs of the state’s defence,” he said.
The announcement comes as Russia unleashed a barrage of air
raids on Ukrainian cities in recent weeks, damaging some 40 percent of
Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
It was the first time the government had used martial law
for such a move since Russia invaded Ukraine in February. It is also the most
dramatic wartime intervention into big business, affecting companies linked to
tycoons whose political power Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s team has
long sought to curb.
The enterprises include aircraft engine manufacturer Motor
Sich working from the partially Russian-controlled region of Zaporizhia,
Danilov told the news conference in the capital, Kyiv.
“After martial law is lifted, these assets may be returned
to their owners or their value may be reimbursed,” Danilov added.
The other energy and manufacturing companies include
Zaporozhtransformator, AvtoKrAZ and the oil and gas company UkrNafta.
The decision was taken at a meeting of top security
officials chaired by Zelenskyy on Saturday and went into effect on Sunday.
The companies are partially owned by the state and are
associated with powerful businessmen, including billionaires Ihor Kolomoisky
and Kostiantyn Zhevaho, as well as businessman Vyacheslav Bohuslayev, who was
arrested in October on suspicion of collaborating with Russia.
“This is not nationalisation,” Reznikov said. “This is a
direct taking over of assets during wartime. These are totally different legal
forms.”
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