KYIV, UKRAINE - Ukrainian officials on Monday lashed out at a parody song targeting Ukraine's former central bank chief and mocking a recent arson attack on her home.
Kvartal 95 is arguably the country's most beloved comedy show and was led by Volodymyr Zelenskiy before he was elected president in April this year. On Sunday, it released a song recorded in collaboration with a famed choir and based on a popular folk tune that went: “A house was burning, up in flames, a woman was weeping in London.”
FILE - A law enforcement officer walks at the site of a burnt house, which is reportedly owned by former Governor of the Ukrainian Central Bank Valeria Gontareva, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Sept. 17, 2019.
Valeria Gontareva's house in Kyiv was firebombed last month in an attack that many said was retribution over her leadership in nationalizing PrivatBank from its oligarch owner Ihor Kolomoyskyi. In August, Gontareva, who is currently a senior policy fellow at the Institute of Global Affairs, was hit by a car in London, where she now lives, and earlier that month a car registered to her daughter-in-law was set on fire in Kyiv.
Former comedian Zelenskiy had business dealings with Kolomoyskyi's media holdings during his acting career before he was elected. The arrival of Zelenskiy has stoked speculation that the decision to nationalize the bank could be reviewed.
Ukrainian Economy Minister Timofei Mylovanov was one of those who on Monday condemned the performance targeting Gontareva, who is well-respected in the investor community.
“Gontareva is under pressure from Kolomoisky because of the ruling on PrivatBank,” he said in a Facebook post. “Kvartal 95 is associated with the government, and jokes against Gontareva could be perceived as a confirmation that the government is linked to the oligarchs.”
Several lawmakers on Monday called for the choir to be blacklisted from performing at state-sponsored events.
Gontareva has been at loggerheads with Kolomoyskyi since she proposed to nationalize PrivatBank in 2016 when it was ailing financially amid a lack of liquidity and allegations of money laundering. The government ended up injecting 155.3 billion hryvnas ($6 billion) into the struggling lender following the move. Ukraine's president at the time, Petro Poroshenko, fully supported PrivatBank's nationalization, which was also hailed by international financial institutions including the International Monetary Fund.
Gontareva has said she has received threats from Kolomoyskyi, who previously publicly promised to send a plane to London to bring her home. The oligarch has denied involvement in the incidents and insisted that his comments in an interview about “helping” Gontareva back home were not a threat.
FILE - Ukraine's Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk speaks during a parliament session in Kyiv, Ukraine, Aug. 29, 2019.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk sought to calm the tensions on Monday, saying that Zelenskiy was deeply concerned about the arson attack on Gontareva's house and is pushing for a thorough investigation into what happened.
“It's wrong to link the president's stance [on the arson attack] with comedy,” Honcharuk said at a televised briefing, adding that he does not approve of jokes “making fun of people's misfortunes.”