EU corruption charges ‘very serious’, says Von der Leyen

BRUSSLES              -          Allegations Qatar bribed EU officials to try to win influence are of the “utmost concern”, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen says. Ms von der Leyen said the accusations were “very serious” and called for the creation of a new EU ethics body. Belgian police have arrested four people, among them European Parliament Vice-President Eva Kaili. The four have been charged with corruption and money-laundering. Qatar has denied wrongdoing. The BBC’s Brussels correspondent, Jessica Parker, says details released by Belgian authorities in the last few days left many people’s jaws on the floor. MEPs who spoke to our correspondent say they are shocked by both the scale and blatancy of the accusations. Belgian police seized cash worth about €600,000 ($632,000; £515,000) in 16 searches in Brussels on Friday. Computers and mobile phones were also taken. No suspects have been publicly named, but Ms Kaili is understood to be among those who have been indicted. Ms Kaili - an MEP for eight years - was suspended from her duties as one of 14 vice-presidents by the president of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola. She has also been suspended from the parliament’s Socialists and Democrats Group and expelled from the Greek centre-left Pasok party. Prosecutors in Greece have reportedly frozen all of Ms Kaili’s assets. Watchdogs and opposition MEPs said the bribery investigation could represent one of the biggest corruption scandals in European Parliament history. Ms von der Leyen said confidence in European institutions required the highest ethical standards. “The allegations against the vice-president of the European Parliament are of utmost concern, very serious,” she said.

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