One year on, no suspects have been charged. A well-known, prize-winning Belarusian journalist,

"Pavel Sheremet’s murder was the public assassination of a world renowned journalist in the center of Kiev. The investigation should have been swift and thorough in order to punish those responsible and send a signal to society that crimes against journalists are inadmissible”, said the head of the NUJU Sergiy Tomilenko.
“However, the fact is that Sheremet's case has entered a long list of unsolved crimes against journalists. In the past several years we have not seen any successful story of solving crimes against journalists and fair punishment of those guilty. Therefore, our message to the authorities: stop impunity immediately!" he said. Journalists from the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and Slidstvo, an investigative journalism project based in Ukraine undertook their own investigation into the murder as well as the police investigation. They uncovered new security footage overlooked by the Ukrainian authorities which identified former SBU agent Igor Ustimenko and two other unknown persons as key witnesses to the planting of the car bomb. The SBU - the Ukrainian Secret Service - is one of the agencies involved in the investigation into Sheremet’s murder. This new evidence was not included in the official investigation until it was released by OCCRP and Slidstvo. Ustimenko was finally questioned in May, however the Ukrainian authorities have refused to share details regarding his statement. The OCCRP and Slidstvo have released their findings in a documentary film titled ‘Killing Pavel’. “It is evident from their obstructionist and insincere conduct that our national authorities passively support violence against the media,” said IMTUU Chairman Igor Chayka. “After a year of failures and obvious subversion of the investigative process, we demand that the Ukrainian government come clean about the details of the investigation and appoint an independent investigator as promised by President Poroshenko”. Sheremet was a recipient of the Committee to Protect Journalists’ International Press Freedom Award in 1999 and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s prize for Journalism and Democracy in 2002. He began his career as a television reporter in his native Belarus before he was pressured into moving to Russia due to his criticism of President Lukashenko’s government. In 2012 Sheremet began writing for Ukrainska Pravda whilst still reporting for Russian state TV station ORT before he resigned in 2014 over their pro-Kremlin coverage of the annexation of Crimea and Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine. Sheremet was supportive of the pro-western Euromaidan Revolution of 2014 that ousted former president Viktor Vanukovych but was also highly critical of the new Ukrainian government. In February 2017, Ukrainian Minister Arsen Avakov claimed that Sheremet’s murder was a “contract killing” ordered by the Russian government however press freedom campaigners and investigators have dismissed this claim as circumstantial.
“Pavel Sheremet’s assassination is yet another tragic example of widespread hostility towards freedom of the press in Ukraine”, said IFJ President Philippe Leruth. “Journalists in Ukraine face a daily reminder of the threat to their lives from hostile groups who persecute and intimidate journalists with impunity, unopposed by a government and police force who have demonstrated that they are either complicit in the attacks on the media or absolutely incapable of protecting it. The IFJ, in support of its affiliates in Ukraine, demands a public report from the Ukrainian authorities over the results of its investigation into the murder of Pavel Sheremet.”