Kyiv (Ukraine), Jan 17 (AP) Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has rejected his prime minister's resignation and asked Oleksiy Honcharuk to stay on the job.

Honcharuk submitted his resignation days after he was caught on tape saying Zelenskiy knows nothing about the economy.

In a video released by Zelenskiy's office on Friday evening, the president said he decided to “give a chance” to Honcharuk and his Cabinet.

Zelenskiy called the tape situation "unpleasant" but said he'd asked Honcharuk to present a report on the results of his work to parliament.

Ukraine's prime minister submitted his resignation Friday, days after he was caught on tape saying President Volodymyr Zelenskiy — a former sitcom star with no previous political experience — knows nothing about the economy.

But political analysts said the resignation is unlikely to go through.

The furor comes at a fraught moment for Zelenskiy, who has found himself in the middle of the impeachment case unfolding against President Donald Trump in Washington.

Trump stands accused of withholding nearly USD 400 million in military aid to Ukraine to pressure the country's leader to investigate Trump political rival Joe Biden.

In a Facebook post, Prime Minister Oleksiy Honcharuk praised Zelenskiy as "an example of transparency and decency to me" and added: “In order to dispel any doubts about our respect and trust for the president, I have written a resignation letter and submitted it to the president for introduction to parliament.”

The Rada, Ukraine's parliament, must vote on whether to accept the offer to step down.. Zelenskiy's office said only that he would take the letter under consideration. But analysts expressed doubt the resignation would happen.

“Zelenskiy doesn't want to dismiss Honcharuk," said Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the Penta think tank.

Ukraine's president fears prompting a political crisis in the country by doing it and doesn't want to complicate his relationship with foreign investors and the International Monetary Fund, said Volodymyr Sidenko, an analyst with the Razumkov Center think tank.

“Honcharuk's resignation can destroy the idea of the government's unity and cast a doubt on Zelenskiy's ability to control the situation,” Sidenko said.

Earlier this week an audio recording surfaced in which Honcharuk appeared to make disparaging comments about Zelenskiy's understanding of economics.

He called Zelenskiy "a layman" in economics and said the president should be better educated about the national currency.

Zelenskiy is a 41-year-old former comedian whose only political experience before his election last spring consisted of playing a Ukrainian president on TV.

He starred in “Servant of the People” as a high school history teacher who is propelled to the highest office after his rant against government corruption goes viral.

Honcharuk said that the recording was a compilation of “fragments of recorded government meetings,” and he blamed unidentified “influential groups” for making it look as if he didn't respect the president.

“It is not true,” the prime minister insisted.

On Thursday, lawmakers from the opposition party Opposition Platform-For Life demanded Honcharuk's resignation, saying he and his cabinet had discredited Ukraine's president and exacerbated the economic crisis in the country. Members of the ruling Servant of the People party said there were no grounds for Honcharuk to step down.

Iryna Herashchenko, a lawmaker in the Rada, said that the parliament had yet to receive any documents related to the resignation and that Honcharuk should have submitted his letter to the parliament and not to the president — otherwise it bears no legal consequences.

“In Ukraine, the parliament appoints the Cabinet,” she said.

The scandal shows that different political forces have started a fight for the position of prime minister, according to Fesenko, the political analyst.

Sidenko blamed Ukrainian oligarchs, saying they are trying to destabilise the country politically because the strengthening of the nation's currency hurts their export-related businesses.

In the meantime, Zelenskiy called for an investigation into the source of the recording, saying, “I demand that in two weeks, as soon as possible, we obtain information on who was recording the tapes.”

While Zelenskiy is a member of Servant of the People party and Honcharuk is an independent, it was Zelenskiy who proposed him to the parliament as prime minister. (AP)

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