Кризис "Киевгорстроя": от строительной пирамиды к политической манипуляции и правовому нигилизму.
The “Kyivmiskbud” crisis has long been about more than the bankruptcy of a single company. It is a symptom of a chronic disease that has affected the capital’s management system, a multi-layered crisis that has exposed its deepest pathologies. On the surface lies an economic disaster — a classic construction pyramid scheme that has left thousands of people without money and housing. Deeper down is a cynical political technology that turns human grief into an electoral resource. And at its very foundation is a conscious legal nihilism and disregard for fundamental legal norms that allows this system to exist and thrive.
That is why the authorities’ attempt to “save” the company by injecting UAH 2.5 billion into it cannot be considered a cure. It is merely a painkiller that temporarily relieves the symptoms but actually preserves the disease, allowing it to develop further. This article proves that the problem is not in individual mistakes, but in the system itself, and without its fundamental restructuring, any budget injections will inevitably be embezzled, only deepening the crisis.
The story of “Kyivmiskbud” is a classic example of the transformation of a reliable state-owned enterprise into a private structure whose main goal was not the construction of housing, but the withdrawal of assets. Established in 1955, the company was a symbol of reliability, but after its privatization in 2004, it turned into a tool for the enrichment of a narrow circle of people.
The mechanism was simple and effective:
The decision on recapitalization should be seen not as an economic step, but as an element of the election campaign that has already effectively started in Kyiv. This technology works according to a clear, cynical plan:
At first glance, the Kyiv City Council’s decision to increase the authorized capital of PJSC “HC ‘Kyivmiskbud'” may seem like a technical or even socially motivated step. However, a detailed analysis reveals a whole range of legal risks and potential violations that turn this decision into a dangerous precedent:
According to Article 7 of the Budget Code of Ukraine, all expenditures must be made taking into account efficiency, effectiveness, and their targeted nature. The allocation of UAH 2.5 billion for recapitalization without an approved and verified plan for the completion of facilities, work schedules, cost estimates, a company audit, and the results of inspections by state bodies (the State Audit Service of Ukraine, the prosecutor’s office, the NACP, the NABU) is evidence of the inefficient disposal of public funds. This may qualify as abuse of office (Article 364 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine) or misuse of budget funds (Article 210 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine).
PJSC “HC ‘Kyivmiskbud'” is a private joint-stock company, not a unitary municipal enterprise, and this legal form is crucial. In accordance with the Civil Code of Ukraine and the Law “On Joint-Stock Companies,” shareholders are not liable for the company’s obligations and risk only the value of the shares they own.
This creates a legal conflict: the territorial community, as the majority shareholder, is not legally obligated to cover the company’s debts. However, the decision on recapitalization effectively forces it to do so, directing billions from the budget to save a commercial structure. Thus, public funds are used to cover private commercial risks and the consequences of inefficient management, while other private shareholders and the management that led to the crisis bear no financial responsibility. This is a clear sign of lobbying for private interests at the expense of the community, as it involves recapitalization with the risk of non-transparent use of funds, without mechanisms for proper control and public reporting.
Key threat: the community pays from the budget to cover debts for which it is not legally responsible, and at the same time has no guarantees that it will receive housing or other property in return.
Formally, recapitalization can be considered as state aid to a business entity. In accordance with the Law of Ukraine “On State Aid to Business Entities,” it is subject to mandatory approval by the Antimonopoly Committee of Ukraine. Otherwise, it may be illegal state aid, which entails an obligation to return the funds to the budget.
The Kyiv City Council’s decision is legally vulnerable, which opens the way for numerous lawsuits and investigations that can block its implementation. Proceedings can take place in several areas:
Without an open independent audit and inventory of property, the decision on recapitalization can be considered legally unfounded. This violates the principle of proper management of municipal property (Article 60 of the Law of Ukraine “On Local Self-Government in Ukraine”).
The Kyiv City Council’s decision is not only economically inefficient but also legally extremely vulnerable, which makes it a dangerous precedent. Its implementation without a proper legal basis, a transparent audit, and effective control mechanisms creates high risks of large-scale corruption, as billions in flows are directed into a non-transparent structure. It also opens a direct path to the misuse of funds, where community money will be spent on anything but the actual completion of housing. Most importantly, this decision creates personal legal risks for everyone involved, opening up the possibility of bringing individual officials to criminal liability for abuse of power or official negligence in the future.
The most painful thing in the whole situation is that it is the territorial community of Kyiv that is actually the main donor of this fraudulent scheme. The allocation of UAH 2.5 billion for the recapitalization of “Kyivmiskbud” is not an abstract financial maneuver — it is real money from the city budget that could have been directed to critical social and infrastructure needs:
These funds are the taxes of Kyiv residents, from small businesses to every employee, and the community has every right to know and control how they are spent.
A direct injection of budget money into a dubious business project without guarantees of a result is, in fact, a gift at the expense of the community to those who have been withdrawing assets from the company for years. This decision is not just ineffective; it deliberately divides society, applying the classic principle of “divide and conquer.”
It is also worth considering that as a result of such decisions:
Thus, the decision on recapitalization directly contradicts the interests of the community, since it:
Stating the problem is not an end in itself. To break this vicious circle, decisive and systemic steps are needed:
This is the only fair way to move from an imitation of a rescue to a real solution to the problem, protecting the interests of both the defrauded investors and the entire territorial community of Kyiv.
Only a radical change in approaches, including a full audit, the inevitable criminal liability of the guilty, and the creation of a transparent municipal alternative, can save not only “Kyivmiskbud” but also the community’s trust in the city authorities. This is about breaking the vicious circle where the consequences of corruption and inefficient management are systematically shifted onto the shoulders of taxpayers. Without this, trust will be finally destroyed, and any future initiatives of the authorities will be perceived through the prism of deep skepticism and suspicion.
The territorial community of Kyiv is not a bottomless wallet to cover others’ crimes and miscalculations. It is a subject of law that should be at the center of any decision concerning public funds and urban space. Every hryvnia directed to saving non-transparent structures is a hryvnia taken from schools, hospitals, and critical infrastructure, the safety of which concerns every resident. Returning the community to its rightful place in the management of the city is the only way to sustainable development and the restoration of elementary justice.
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