Schedule

Kyiv Lviv Kharkiv Odesa
March 5
START TIMELOCATIONSPEAKERSTOPICS / DESCRIPTION
11:00 AMKYIV– Ihor Ponochovnyi, Head of the Prosecutor’s Office of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol;

– Wayne Jordash, Managing Partner of Global Rights Compliance;

– Tamila Tasheva, Permanent Representative of the President of Ukraine to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea;

– Andrii Shchekun, representative of the Crimean Diocese of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine;

Briefing entitled: “Occupied religion: Ukraine handed over evidence of crimes against humanity committed by the russian federation in Crimea to the International Criminal Court”

Topics of focus:
– Information on the involvement of occupying state officials and its occupation administration in the illegal persecution of religious communities on the occupied peninsula;
– Consequences caused by the illegal actions of the russian occupation authorities;
– The seriousness of such a crime through the prism of national and international law;
– The latest update on the investigation into the situation in Ukraine within the framework of the ICC;

Why this is interesting:
Since 2014, the main goal of the russian occupation authorities has been to erase religious identity that clashes with the requirements of the kremlin. The occupying authorities of the russian federation systematically put pressure on religious communities in Crimea, including members of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (“OCU”), Jehovah’s Witnesses, Muslims and others.


Registration form:
https://forms.gle/2uow2FErHbkeKaQD9 
12:00 PMKYIV– Tamila Tasheva, Permanent Representative of the President of Ukraine to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea;

– Iryna Tykhomyrova, President of MIM Business School;

All in person.

Press conference entitled: “Ukraine is launching the project to train state officials for the de-occupied territories”

Topics of focus:
– Why is business education becoming an integral element of knowledge for officials in public positions?
– Training future leaders who will represent the state and the reintegration policy vector.
– What management and social challenges did the de-occupation of a part of Ukrainian territories reveal in 2022? How does this affect training of personnel reserves?
– Who and under what conditions can apply to participate in the program and how to apply?

Why this is interesting:
Currently occupied territories will require tens of thousands of state officials after returning to Ukraine’s control. Crimea alone will need at least 50,000 specialists.
Therefore, a project is being launched in Ukraine to train state officials for the de-occupied territories. About a hundred potential state officials in de-occupied territories will begin training under the Reintegration Management Program in April. The program was initiated by the Office of the Representative of the President of Ukraine in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and is implemented by the MIM Business School with the support of the Office of the President of Ukraine and the USAID project “Ukraine Confidence Building Initiative (UCBI).”