The investigation, during which Belgian police discovered huge
stacks of cash as they raided the homes and offices of EU lawmakers,
parliamentary assistants and NGO campaigners has triggered one of
the biggest corruption scandals to hit Brussels.
Prosecutors suspect Greek MEP Eva Kaili and three others accepted
bribes from World Cup host Qatar in a bid to influence EU
policymaking.
Kaili's lawyer Michalis Dimitrakopoulos told Reuters on Tuesday that
his client was innocent and Qatari officials have also denied any
wrongdoing.
The case has sent shockwaves through the European Parliament and
could badly dent its efforts to present itself as a sound moral
compass that takes government in Europe and beyond to task on ethics
and human rights.
Kaili, her partner Francesco Giorgi, who is a parliamentary
assistant, Niccolo Figa-Talamanca, the secretary-general of a rule
of law campaign group, and Pier Antonio Panzeri, an ex-MEP and
founder of another non-profit campaign group, have all been in
custody since Friday.
They will appear before the judge at around 11:40 (1040 GMT) and the
hearings are set to take about an hour or two, a judicial source
said.
Reuters could not reach Giorgi, Figa-Talamanca and Panzeri or their
lawyers for comment. Non-profit organisations they work with did not
respond to emailed requests seeking comment.
Any release would likely be conditional on their not contacting
their co-accused and not leaving Belgium, the source said.
The European Parliament on Tuesday voted to strip Kaili, a 44-year
old Greek Socialist MEP, of her vice presidency role. Lawmakers have
called her to quit the assembly altogether.
The European Parliament's president Roberta Metsola said the
assembly was carrying out internal investigations and would tighten
lobbying rules and ensure a better oversight of contacts between
MEPs and foreign governments.
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.
($1 = 0.9400 euros)
(Reporting by Johnny Cotton and Phil Blenkinsop; Writing by Ingrid
Melander; Editing by Jon Boyle)
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