European Parliament removes Kaili from post over Qatar graft charges
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[December 13, 2022]
By Andreas Buerger and Charlotte Van Campenhout
STRASBOURG (Reuters) -The European Parliament stripped Greek lawmaker
Eva Kaili of her senior assembly post on Tuesday over allegations that
World Cup host Qatar had bribed her to influence decision-making,
charges she has denied.
Kaili, one of 14 vice presidents in the parliament, was among four
people arrested and charged in Belgium over the scandal that has
triggered outrage in Brussels and risks damaging the European Union's
image.
The case, in which police discovered stacks of cash, casts a shadow over
the European Parliament which seeks to be a moral compass, criticising
global rights abuses and taking EU governments to task over any hint of
impropriety.
Qatar has denied any wrongdoing.
The parliament acted quickly to loosen ties with Kaili, with 625 MEPs
voting in favour of the move, only one against and two abstaining.
"The integrity of @Europarl_EN comes first and foremost," President
Roberta Metsola tweeted.
Michalis Dimitrakopoulos, Kaili's lawyer in Greece, said earlier on
Tuesday: "Her position is that she is innocent, I can tell you that."
"She has nothing to do with financing from Qatar, nothing, explicitly
and unequivocally," Dimitrakopoulos told Open TV in a first public
comment.
Several EU states including Germany, said the 27-nation union's
credibility was at stake. Countries which have faced criticism from the
assembly, including EU member Hungary, said it had lost the moral high
ground.
"From now on the European Parliament will not be able to speak about
corruption in a credible manner," Hungary Foreign Minister Peter
Szijjarto wrote on Facebook.
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Ali bin Samikh Al Marri, Qatar's
minister of labour, speaks with Greece's Eva Kaili, vice president
of the European Parliament, during a meeting in Qatar, October 31,
2022 in this social media handout image. Twitter/Ministry of Labour
- State of Qatar via REUTERS
Belgian police searched 19 homes and the offices of the parliament
from Friday to Monday as part of their investigation and seized
computers, mobile phones and cash, some of it found in a suitcase in
a hotel room.
None of the four people charged have been formally identified, but
Kaili's name was rapidly leaked to the press.
Belgian prosecutors said they had suspected for more than four
months that a Gulf state was trying to buy influence in Brussels.
Although no state was publicly named by prosecutors, a source with
knowledge of the case said it was Qatar.
Several European lawmakers called for Kaili to quit.
"Given the extent of the corruption scandal, it is the least we
could expect of her," said MEP Manon Aubry, who co-chairs the Left
group.
Manfred Weber, of the conservative European's People Party, said:
"Our colleagues at the European Parliament have been deeply shocked.
These developments represent a heavy burden."
The Greek authorities on Monday froze Kaili's assets in her
homeland, while the Greek socialist PASOK party said it would expel
her from its ranks.
Kaili, 44, a Socialist MEP was among a stable of young aspiring
Greek politicians who emerged in the debilitating debt crisis which
swept Greece from 2010 to 2015, where the country required three
international bailouts.
(Additional reporting by Phil Blenkinsop, Karolina Tagaris, Clement
Rossignol, Max Schwarz, Lefteris Papadimas, Michele Kambas; Writing
by Ingrid Melander; Editing by Arun Koyyur, Edmund Blair and
Crispian Balmer)
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