Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies deny the Russian propaganda story about Olena Zelenska’s “arrest”

May 18, 2026 - 13:08
Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies deny the Russian propaganda story about Olena Zelenska’s “arrest”

ukraine's anti-corruption agencies deny russian story about olena zelenska's arrest · post first lady zelenska (l) president volodymyr zelenskyy presidentgovua олена зеленська (л) разом зі своїм чоловіком вітає українців із

On the afternoon of 17 May, Russia's state-owned news agency RIA Novosti spread a fabricated claim that Ukraine's anti-corruption bodies were preparing to arrest first lady Olena Zelenska, which those bodies flatly denied the same evening. Ukraine's National Anti-Corruption Bureau and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office say they are conducting no such proceedings. Both tie the claim to a wider Russian disinformation campaign against Ukraine.

Moscow runs a sustained information war alongside its invasion, repeatedly manufacturing scandals to corrode the trust in institutions and the unity that holds Ukraine's wartime resistance and Western support together.

What Russia claimed

RIA Novosti stated on 17 May 2026, citing unnamed "Russian security structures," that the prosecutors and bureau were preparing to detain the president's wife and deciding which criminal case should come first. The same report claimed President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had stepped up his family's security and begun "bargaining" with Western partners, and that his advisers were urging him to divorce his wife as publicly as possible.

ukraine's anti-corruption agencies deny russian story about olena zelenska's arrest · post disinformation purported first lady responses bureau prosecutors photo_2026-05-17_21-53-11 ukraine news ukrainian reports
The Russian disinformation about a purported "arrest" of Ukraine's first lady, with the responses by Ukraine's anti-corruption bureau and prosecutors. Screenshots: NABU / SAP

The Russian newspaper Izvestia was among the outlets shown amplifying the claim in the screenshots published by the agencies, and ZN wrote that other propaganda resources picked it up.

What the anti-corruption bodies replied

The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) said it is carrying out none of the procedural actions described in the Russian claims. It called the material part of a systemic disinformation campaign by the aggressor state, aimed at discrediting Ukrainian institutions, undermining trust in anti-corruption bodies and weakening national unity during the full-scale war. 

The Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAP) issued a near-identical message the same evening, noting that Russian propaganda has tried before to exploit anti-corruption investigations to destabilize Ukraine from within

Both urged the public and media to verify information through official sources and not spread the enemy's fakes.

NABU director Semen Kryvonos had also earlier said Zelenskyy did not and does not figure in the pre-trial investigation into the "Dynasty" construction case, which is linked to his former chief of staff Andrii Yermak. That statement predated the new Russian claim about his wife.