The EU Anti-Corruption Initiative in Ukraine (EUACI) is the European Union’s technical support program in the area of anti-corruption in Ukraine, co-funded and implemented by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Denmark. The overall objective of the EUACI is to achieve significant progress in preventing and countering corruption, ensuring the coherence and systemic anti-corruption activities of state and local self-government bodies, and to empower civil society and citizens to contribute to the combatting of corruption, as well as the proper process of Ukraine’s post-war recovery. The program runs till April 2027.
The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) is one of the EUACI’s key partners, playing a vital role in combating high-level corruption and upholding the rule of law in Ukraine. As part of this cooperation, the EUACI supports the development of NABU’s capacity, ensuring that the Bureau has the necessary infrastructure and technological capabilities to operate efficiently and securely.
As part of this support, the EUACI is seeking a supplier for high-performance automated workstations aiming to enhance the operational and analytical capacity of NABU detectives.
The aim of the project is to ensure the timely, comprehensive, and reliable analysis of digital evidence obtained during pre-trial investigations, thereby improving the quality and effectiveness of investigations, strengthening NABU’s institutional capabilities, and supporting its mandate to combat high-level corruption.
Interested suppliers can request the documents for participation by e-mail to the contact person stated below:
Name of Programme Officer: Serhii Kononenko, IT Expert.
E-mail address: [email protected], cc to [email protected] indicating the subject line: “Request NABU SPW”.
Deadline for applications: 17 March 2026, 17.00 Kyiv Time.
Proposals received after the deadline shall be rejected.
The bid should be submitted within the above deadline to [email protected], cc to [email protected] indicating the subject line: “Bid NABU SPW”.