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Stronger Together: The Second Wave of Investigative Journalism from Regional Media

This is already the second series of materials within the project «Stronger Together: Transparency and the Fight Against Corruption», where we gather publications created by the program’s participants.

The goal is to show how local media investigate issues within their communities and bring transparency back where it is lacking. Each investigation contains concrete facts, real stories, and attempts to find answers to questions that matter to the regions. The teams are supported by mentors in creating these materials.

Below is the second selection of published investigations from the project participants, sorted by publication date.

Chernihiv Media Group

How Much Do Chernihiv Telegram Channels Earn, Who Runs Them, and What They Publish

Team mentor: Nataliia Lazarovych, Bihus.Info

Publication date: October 10, 2025

According to analysts, Telegram is one of the most popular messengers in Ukraine. Millions of users across various countries trust it with their data and personal messages. But how safe is it — and what role do Russian intelligence services play here? The journalists set out to find out who stands behind Chernihiv’s Telegram channels, which have become a primary source of news for many residents. They monitored the content, explored advertising rates, estimated the potential monthly income, and explained what readers should do when they encounter obvious fakes or manipulative posts.

Why did they choose this topic? The team admits being genuinely irritated when local Telegram channels spread blatant fakes about the city — such as the story about a “200-year-old brick underground structure near a pipeline.” People believe, react, and keep sharing, since the ranking of the most popular social networks in Ukraine has remained nearly unchanged in recent years — with Telegram still on top.

Read the full investigation HERE

Odessa Life

Billions a Year: Why the Odesa Authorities Keep Residents Out of Budget Planning

Team mentor: Alisa Yurchenko, The Kyiv Independent

Publication date: October 16, 2025

The Odesa city authorities have yet to approve a mechanism that would allow residents to participate in the budgeting process. According to journalists, such a mechanism could help cut non-priority expenses during wartime and increase support for the military.

Over a year ago, Hennadii Trukhanov — the former mayor of Odesa, who was stripped of his Ukrainian citizenship — held a roundtable with representatives of the local civic initiative «Money for the Armed Forces» and promised to implement their proposals «where possible». The group’s main demand was to increase the share of Odesa’s municipal budget allocated to support military personnel.

Since then, little has changed: every Saturday, activists continue to protest, arguing that the city authorities only partially meet their demands. For now, such demonstrations remain the only relatively effective way for Odesa residents to influence the city’s budgeting decisions. Thanks to this pressure, activists have managed to block several allocations for costly urban renovations during the full-scale war.

Read the full analysis here

Vgoru

Business Trip to the Occupation: Who Headed the «Ministries» in Occupied Kherson Region in 2025

Team mentor: Nataliia Lazarovych, Bihus.Info

Publication date: October 22, 2025

Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the occupiers have been systematically replacing legitimate Ukrainian authorities with their own. Initially, they «cloned» Ukrainian institutions and engaged locals to head various «departments» and «directorates». By late summer 2022, these bodies were restructured into «ministries», copying Russia’s model of governance. Increasingly, Moscow replaced local collaborators with officials from Russia or occupied Crimea, lured by lucrative positions in these illegal bodies.

Currently, there are 17 «ministries» operating in occupied Kherson region. Vgoru’s investigation focuses on the individuals who lead them in 2025 — either as «ministers» or acting heads. Are many of them local collaborators? Spoiler: no. Recent personnel changes reveal Moscow’s clear preference for Russians.

Read the full investigation

Intent

«Anubis» Cashes In: How Odesa Turns the Memory of Fallen Defenders into a Business

Team mentor: Nataliia Onysko, NGL.media

Publication date: October 23, 2025

Last year, Babel Street in Odesa was renamed in honor of fallen Ukrainian defender Dmytro Ivanov. At No. 12 on that street is the funeral agency «Anubis», owned by the Pestruiev family — well-known players in the city’s funeral services market. For years, the owners of «Anubis» profited, among other things, from installing headstones for soldiers who gave their lives for Ukraine.

Currently, the company’s activities are under investigation by law enforcement. The newsroom «Intent» looked into the details.

Read more HERE

20 Hvylyn (Vinnytsia)

A Lexus for $700: How Vinnytsia City Council Deputies Managed to Buy Such Cheap Cars

Team mentor: Anastasiia Usenko, Bihus.Info

Publication date: October 27, 2025

Several deputies of the Vinnytsia City Council declared suspiciously cheap cars — vehicles whose declared value does not match their actual market price. Why? Each had their own explanation: some claimed they bought a damaged car “for repair,” others indicated a symbolic price during re-registration. And all this despite having quite decent official incomes.

So, could the reason be an attempt to conceal assets from the National Agency on Corruption Prevention (NACP)? Or to avoid paying taxes? The newsroom’s journalists investigated the matter.

Read the full investigation

Ye.ua

My House Is on the Edge»: Why Historical Buildings Are Disappearing in Khmelnytskyi

Team mentor: Nataliia Onysko, NGL.media

Publication date: October 28, 2025

The central part of Khmelnytskyi is dotted with signs reading «City’s Historical Heritage». Yet behind this symbolism lies a largely legal void.

Today, the Khmelnytskyi Regional State Administration lists 105 potentially valuable historical buildings within the city. Officials have known about their potential cultural significance for at least 15 years. However, these architectural sites still have not been granted official heritage status.

Other historical buildings have been disappearing from the city’s streets without ever receiving even the status of «newly identified cultural heritage sites» — a classification that, although imperfect, provides some protection from illegal reconstruction or demolition.

Read more

Tochka Dostupu

«The House Belongs to His Mother, the Car to His Mother-in-Law, and the Land to His Wife»: What a Kropyvnytskyi Deputy “Forgot” to Declare

Team mentor: Nataliia Onysko, NGL.media

Publication date: October 30, 2025

Ihor Botnarenko, a deputy of the Kropyvnytskyi District Council from the Servant of the People party, presented the Order «For Courage» to the families of fallen soldiers from the Kirovohrad region three times within a single week in July this year. Posts about these ceremonies appeared on the official pages of the Sokolivska, Rivnianska, and Novomyrhorodska communities. However, this sparked outrage among residents of another community — Hannivska — where Botnarenko had previously worked as head of the legal department at the local council. While in that position, he was charged with extortion and bribery related to a road repair project in Hannivska community.

The newsroom «Tochka Dostupu» looked into this criminal case and unexpectedly discovered that Botnarenko should be of interest not only to the police but also to the National Agency on Corruption Prevention (NACP), as he fails to declare even half of the assets he actually uses. What exactly the deputy is hiding — find out in the investigation.

Read the full story HERE

Skhidnyi variant

Donetsk Regional Administration Spent ₴25 Million on a Sanatorium Center Near the Frontline That Cannot Be Used

Team mentor: Alisa Yurchenko, The Kyiv Independent

Publication date: October 30, 2025

Over the past two years, ₴24.5 million have been spent on the reconstruction of the wellness center «Perlyna Donetchyny» («The Pearl of Donetsk Region») in Sviatohirsk — but the work was never completed due to the security situation.

The idea of restoring this facility in a frontline area drew public criticism from the very beginning, in autumn 2023. Time has proven that the concerns were justified.

The partially renovated sanatorium complex never reopened as a center for people in need of temporary housing. Meanwhile, nearly ₴25 million were paid to two contracting companies.

The newsroom «Skhidnyi Variant» investigated who signed these contracts, under what circumstances, and whether anyone will be held accountable for the waste of public funds.

Read the full investigation

18000

«Scheme Thinking»: How a “Gift” to the City Turned into a Present for the Inner Circle of Cherkasy’s City Hall

Team mentor: Maksym Opanasenko, Bihus.Info

Publication date: October 30, 2025

Once, a tobacco factory stood in the center of Cherkasy. Like many similar facilities across Ukraine, in the mid-2000s it became part of one of the global giants — the company «Japan Tobacco». However, after purchasing the asset, JT focused only on the equipment, which it soon relocated to another city. The building itself, which also came under the company’s ownership, was later donated to the city, with the transfer formally completed in 2011.

That same year, the agreement specified the only acceptable future use of the property. Then-mayor of Cherkasy, Serhii Odarych, pledged on behalf of the city to use the donated property exclusively for social, cultural, communal, and environmental purposes. And there was plenty of room to work with — nearly three hectares of land hosting tens of thousands of square meters of real estate.

At first, everything went well. The site housed a municipal Administrative Service Center, several volunteer hubs, and sports clubs and sections. The property remained in communal ownership — until 2023.

In the second year of the full-scale invasion, the city suddenly «forgot» about its agreement with the international company and decided to sell part of the former tobacco factory. Almost a thousand square meters of property and the land beneath it ended up in private hands. But how — and more importantly, whose hands?

The journalists of «18000» investigated it

Read the first series and collection of materials here: «Truth in Details: An Overview of Journalistic Investigations within the Stronger Together Project».

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The Stronger Together: Transparency and Anti-Corruption program is implemented by AIRPPU in partnership with WAN-IFRA and the Norwegian Media Association (MBL), with the support of Norway.

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