Europe | Rule of law in Ukraine

Mr Saakashvili goes to Odessa

A Georgian reformer tackles Ukraine’s real public enemy number one: corruption

|ODESSA AND KIEV

IN THE spring of 2014, as the war in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region was breaking out, deadly clashes wracked the elegant port city of Odessa. On May 2nd pro-Russian separatists shot at pro-Ukrainian demonstrators from behind police lines. The riot ended in a fire that killed 46 separatists. The city has been largely quiet ever since.

Yet over the past few months Odessa, now governed by Mikheil Saakashvili, a former president of Georgia, has become a battleground in a less visible sort of war. This pits the corrupt post-Soviet system that has ruled Ukraine for nearly a quarter of a century against the law-based state that was promised by the Maidan revolution in Kiev nearly two years ago.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Mr Saakashvili goes to Odessa"

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