A report on a possible environmental disaster in the Donbas region:
Ukraine to spend billions to build road connections to EU countries:
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development on the failure of reform in Ukraine:
A report on inflation in Ukraine comparing the cost of an Easter basket full of goods this week to one in 2016:
An extensive report, in Ukrainian, on the annexation of Crimea:
Longer piece from our news desk on Hontareva:
KYIV -- Ukrainian central bank chief Valeria Hontareva (eds: a woman) has resigned amid political pressure.
Hontareva, a reformist who won praise from the West, told reporters Kyiv that she submitted a letter of resignation to President Petro Poroshenko on April 10.
"I think my mission is accomplished as the reforms have been implemented," Hontareva said.
She added that her successor will face the same political pressure that she faced, and that the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) should be independent from politics.
Hontareva's efforts to clean up Ukraine's financial sector irked tycoons who critics say have treated the country's banks like their private coffers.
She also came under fire from some ordinary Ukrainians who blamed her for losses they suffered after she was appointed to follow the International Monetary Fund's advice to partially abandon state support for the hryvnya currency.
The hrynvya has fallen from 12 to the dollar on the day of her appointment in June 2014 to 27 on April 10, diminishing people's savings and stoking inflation hat reached almost 50 percent in 2014.
But Hontareva's decisions helped the central bank stay afloat and helped bolster ties with the IMF and other lenders.
On April 3, The IMF approved a $1 billion tranche of its $17.5 billion bailout program, in what Proshenko said was "recognition of Ukrainian reforms."
The IMF had postponed the disbursement of the tranche after Kyiv imposed a trade embargo on eastern parts of the country that are controlled by Russia-backed separatists.
With reporting by UNIAN, Reuters, and AFP
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