Court arrests two land plots and a Mercedes car of Ukrainian energy minister
Kyiv Court of Appeal, as an interim measure, has arrested two land plots and a car owned by Ukrainian Energy and Coal Industry Minister Ihor Nasalyk.
The respective court ruling of November 22 was published in the state register.
The plaintiff, as part of a lawsuit with which the minister's property was arrested, demands the repayment of $1.249 million as debt under a contract of July 10, 2017, as well as UAH 2.749 million as interest on it.
Although the names of the owner of the arrested property and the plaintiff are hidden, however, the inventory of property completely coincides with Nasalyk's income declaration. In particular, the court arrested land plots with an area of 0.12 hectares in the village of Protsiv (Boryspil district, Kyiv region), an area of 0.037 hectares in Kozyn (Obukhiv district, Kyiv region), and a 2015 Mercedes Benz S500L 4Matic car.
According to the media, businessman Petro Dyminsky might be the plaintiff in this case.
Advertising
Advertising
MORE ABOUT
Energy Minister insists on supplying gas to Luhansk TPP at special price
17:49, 21.08.2019
NABU detectives notify minister Nasalyk on suspicion due to incorrect information in e-declaration
18:02, 09.07.2019
PM instructs energy minister, SPF leadership to unlock purchase of Lviv-made coal, make coal of state-run coalmines priority for state-run energy companies
13:55, 13.06.2019
Energy minister advocates holding of extraordinary Rada session to discuss feed-in tariff for prosumers
10:22, 10.06.2019
New electricity market should be launched from July 1 – Energy ministry
14:35, 16.05.2019
LATEST
2026 state budget, once war continues, to require at least UAH 325 bln – Pidlasa
20:32, 22.12.2025
Ukraine unveils first cheese map and printed guide for 2021-2025
20:31, 22.12.2025
New bus market in Ukraine will grow by 13-15% by 2025 – expert
19:57, 22.12.2025
Ukraine's real GDP growth accelerates to 3.6% in Nov due to later corn harvest – IER
16:52, 22.12.2025
Gen.Hope center for child recovery finds first $7 mln from Canadian, UK donors