A Croatian corruption investigation snares the health minister and
several others
Send a link to a friend
[November 15, 2024]
By DARKO BANDIC
ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) — Croatia's health minister and several others were
detained on Friday on suspicion of corruption as part of an
investigation launched by the European prosecutor's office, authorities
said.
Minister Vili Beroš, directors of two hospitals in Zagreb, Croatia's
capital, and two companies are suspected of "accepting and giving
bribes, abuse of position and authority and money laundering," the
European Public Prosecutor’s Office, or EPPO, in Zagreb said in a
statement.
Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković promptly sacked Beroš from the
government, HRT state television said. Croatian media reported that
police raided Beroš' home in Zagreb early on Friday.
“Personally, I am appalled by the idea that anyone in the health system
would use their position for personal gains or for favors to anyone
else,” Plenković said at a press conference. “The health system is a
particularly sensitive department.
“We as a government have not and will not protect anyone from criminal
prosecution if they are suspected of committing criminal acts,
regardless of who that may be or which duty they have,” Plenković said.
Beroš' lawyer Laura Valković said he has rejected the graft accusations.
Croatia has had severe problems with systemic and political corruption.
Among the 27 European Union member countries, it is generally ranked by
international anti-graft groups as one of the most corrupt states.
The EPPO statement said that five of the suspects between June 2022 and
Nov. 2024 “teamed up” to secure undue financial gains for two companies
by promising and giving monetary rewards to relevant stakeholders.
[to top of second column]
|
Croatian Health Minister Vili Beros, right, bumps elbows to say
hello to French Health Minister Olivier Veran during an
extraordinary meeting of EU health ministers in Brussels to discuss
the virus outbreak, March 6, 2020. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)
“Their goal was to ensure that one of the companies was allowed to
sell medical robotic devices for several hospitals in Croatia,” the
statement added. The group are also suspected of offering bribes to
manipulate the public procurement process and exclude market
competition in favor of that company.
“Other suspects offered and handed over bribes to several relevant
stakeholders in the public health system, including the minister of
health and the directors of two hospitals, to gain their support for
different contracts" funded by the EU or Croatia's national budget,
said the EPPO statement.
This was attempted on at least four occasions but didn't work in
case of an EU-funded project in the coastal town of Split, where the
responsible person refused the offered bribe, the prosecutors said.
In other three cases in various hospitals in Zagreb, the statement
said, “there are allegations that the minister of health, in
exchange for a bribe received, issued approvals for the purchase of
operating microscopes at unreasonably inflated prices, and provided
funds for public procurement.”
The price was “unjustifiably increased by 619.582,64 euros
($654,000) to the detriment of the Croatian national budget,” it
added.
The EPPO is the independent public prosecutors' office of the
European Union. It is responsible for investigating, prosecuting and
bringing to judgment crimes against the financial interests of the
EU.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |