"Prosecutors say the glamorous lifestyle of a European
lawmaker masked a Qatari corruption scandal. It exposed how vulnerable Brussels
is to foreign influence.
Princes and presidents traversed the white marble floors of
the ultra-selective V.V.I.P. box overlooking the field for the first game of
the World Cup. But mingling among the soccer legends and Gulf royals was a
figure few outside European politics would recognize: Eva Kaili.
Ms. Kaili, a Greek politician, was a vice president of the
European Parliament, a sprawling body with limited power (and 14 vice
presidents). She had no official business in Qatar. Her trip was private,
people who saw her in the V.V.I.P. box said.
And then, less than a day later, she was back in Brussels,
delivering an impassioned defense of Qatar against criticism of its
exploitation of migrant workers who had built the World Cup stadiums.
“The World Cup in Qatar is proof, actually, of how sports
diplomacy can achieve a historical transformation of a country with reforms
that inspired the Arab world,” Ms. Kaili said. She chastised Qatar’s critics as
bullies. “They accuse everyone that talks to them or engages, of corruption.”
Less than three weeks later, she was in jail, accused of
trading political decisions for cash. The Belgian authorities charged her last
weekend alongside her life partner, Francesco Giorgi, and two others in an
investigation into Qatari influence. Police raids uncovered €1.5 million in
cash. Roughly half that was found in a hotel room occupied by Ms. Kaili’s
father; another €150,000 was found in the apartment Ms. Kaili shared with her
partner, prosecutors said.
The case, which Belgian authorities say they’ve been
building for over a year with the help of their secret services, has uncovered
what prosecutors say was a cash-for-favors scheme at the heart of the European
Union. And it highlighted the vulnerabilities in an opaque, notoriously
bureaucratic system that decides policies for 450 million people in the world’s
richest club of nations.
Ms. Kaili’s lawyer, Michalis Dimitrakopoulos, said she was
innocent. “She simply had no knowledge of the cash,” he said. “She did Qatar no
favors at all, because all her positions were, in fact, in line with E.U.
policy on Qatar.”
Mr. Giorgi’s lawyer had no comment. Italy’s La Repubblica
newspaper reported Thursday, citing sealed court documents, that Mr. Giorgi was
cooperating with investigators.
Qatar has forcefully denied the allegations.
The investigation has jolted sleepy Brussels and unleashed a
flurry of whispered accusations of corrupt behavior by lawmakers of all
political stripes. It has also sparked scrutiny of foreign influence at a time
when the European Union is asserting itself on issues like human rights and the military operation in Ukraine.
Apart from Qatar, the Belgian authorities are also
investigating links to Morocco, a government official familiar with the matter
said.
“It has been a difficult week in Brussels,” Roberta Metsola,
the president of the European Parliament, told E.U. leaders on Thursday. “There
will always be some for whom a bag of cash is always worth the risk. It is
essential that these people understand that they will get caught.”
Investigators in Washington, too, have tried to crack down
on illegal foreign lobbying, including for Qatar, which has separately been
accused of bribing its way into being awarded the World Cup. But while American
law requires foreign lobbyists to publicly disclose their affiliations,
Brussels has few disclosure requirements. Most such influence peddling occurs
under the secretive umbrella of diplomacy.
That is especially true in the European Parliament, the
least powerful but only directly elected institution in the European Union
power structure. Its 705 lawmakers approve legislation and participate in the
legislative process, but its debates, events and resolutions have mostly
reputational impact for those involved.
“The Parliament is easily accessible and it has become an
attractive ground for all kinds of lobbyists,” said Michiel van Hulten, the
head of Transparency International E.U. and a former European lawmaker himself.
“Because of this, it is relatively easy to operate under the radar and not get
caught,” he added.
A Perfect Match
Eva Kaili, 44, and Francesco Giorgi, 35, started their
relationship in Parliament’s labyrinthine halls in 2017, according to people
who know them. She was in her first term in office. He was an aide to a senior
member of Parliament, Pier Antonio Panzeri. Both were members of the
center-left Socialists and Democrats group.
This account is based on interviews with two dozen
lawmakers, E.U. and Belgian government officials, and aides directly familiar
with the case and the people involved, as well as an examination of private
correspondence, years of social media posts, policy drafts and voting records.
Most of those interviewed for this article requested
anonymity because they did not want to get dragged into a high-profile criminal
investigation.
Ms. Kaili and Mr. Giorgi documented their lives in social
media posts that exuded success and confidence: sailing in the Aegean Sea,
skiing Mont Blanc, visiting mosques in Oman and drinking cocktails in Minorca.
The couple spent the coronavirus lockdowns together mostly
in Athens, Ms. Kaili told Greek tabloids that have long covered her private
life, and last February, welcomed a baby girl into the world.
Mr. Giorgi is linked to the corruption investigation not
just through his partner, but also his former boss. Mr. Panzeri, 67, was
arrested last week at his home in Brussels, where the Belgian police found
€600,000 euros ($632,000) in cash. His wife and daughter were also arrested in
their hometown near Milan.
Mr. Panzeri’s lawyer did not respond to requests for
comment.
The authorities say Mr. Panzeri played a central role in
cultivating relations with Qatari and Moroccan officials and facilitating the
flow of cash to Brussels, including through a non-governmental organization he
leads.
Before Kickoff
As the World Cup neared, Ms. Kaili’s and Mr. Giorgi’s
advocacy of Qatar intensified. She argued against any attempt to condemn the
human-rights abuses in Qatar, an absolute monarchy that criminalizes
homosexuality and requires a woman under the age of 25 to obtain permission
from a male guardian to travel abroad.
She pushed for visa-free travel for Qataris visiting the
European Union.
Colleagues said she also undermined Parliament’s scrutiny of
Qatar’s handling of the World Cup.
Hannah Neumann, a European lawmaker from Germany who chairs
the delegation for relations with the Arabian Peninsula, had planned a
committee trip to Doha for over a year. Committee members were supposed to
critically assess Qatar’s progress before the World Cup kickoff.
Then in late September, the Qatari government abruptly told
her the trip had to be canceled because the building where they were to meet
was under construction.
So Ms. Neumann said she was stunned and angry a month later,
when Ms. Kaili showed up in Doha in her stead. In a whirlwind two-day trip, Ms.
Kaili even held a meeting with the head of state, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
al-Thani, which she had seemingly organized herself, people familiar with her
visit said.
“She was giving statements that were much more pro-Qatar
than the Parliament’s position, pretending to speak on behalf of Parliament,”
Ms. Neumann said in an interview with The Times.
Ms. Kaili’s lawyer and a spokesman for the Parliament’s
president said that her trip was an official mission.
Two weeks later, in mid-November, a seemingly
uncontroversial resolution criticizing Qatar’s human-rights record ran into
unexpected resistance. “It was difficult to even put it on the agenda,” said
the liberal lawmaker Katalin Cseh. “I was shocked.”
Even Ms. Kaili’s political allies were frustrated. “As
social democrats, we should take the lead in putting the spotlight on the
human-rights violations,” the Danish lawmaker Niels Fuglsang said in an
interview. He said a resolution he drafted criticizing Qatar was opposed by at
least one of the people now being investigated — he would not say who — and was
ultimately rejected.
It was replaced by one that praised Qatar for reforms that
are “an example for the Gulf region.” The new text said that Qatar had “already
improved the working and living conditions for hundreds of thousands of
workers.” Qatari officials have indeed implemented changes to their
labor-sponsorship system, though activists say they are insufficient.
Set on softening the final resolution, Mr. Giorgi, working
for a new member of Parliament, sent out an email to all socialist lawmakers to
vote down an amendment that said that Qatar had bribed to win the hosting of
the World Cup.
“The European Parliament should not accuse a country without
evidences coming out from the competent judicial authorities,” said the email,
sent in the name of the lawmaker Andrea Cozzolino. When the vote was held Nov.
24, he succeeded in getting the bribery language removed.
Since her arrest, Ms. Kaili has been stripped of her
vice-presidential title and expelled from both her Greek party, Pasok, and her
European Parliament political group, the Socialists and Democrats. The Greek
authorities are also investigating her finances.
The European Parliament was set to vote this week on the
Qatar visa-free travel proposal. That vote, and all other work relating to
Qatar, has been suspended.
Ms. Kaili’s energetic lobbying for the tiny Gulf state was
not entirely unusual for the European Parliament.
In the days since the arrests, lawmakers and operatives
privately pointed fingers, accusing their rivals of similar clandestine
efforts. But the ability to take undisclosed meetings with foreign agents is
built into the rules of Parliament.
“It is not an accident that a gray zone exists in Brussels,”
said Mr. van Hulten of Transparency International E.U. “This is how the
institutions wanted it.”
Ms. Kaili’s statements may not have delivered policy
changes, which are mostly crafted by the European Commission, the bloc’s
executive branch. But the Parliament is perfectly suited to produce something
Qatar needed: positive publicity.
The scandal could be particularly damaging to Qatar’s reputation
abroad at a time when officials would rather focus on their hosting of the
World Cup, which they’ve been building toward for more than a decade.
The tournament, which ends Sunday, has been the basis of a
grand $220-billion nation-building project for a state the size of Connecticut,
and is part of a broader push by Qatar’s rulers to garner influence around the
world. Those efforts go beyond sports; they’ve established an international
airline and a global media empire, Al Jazeera. And like its Gulf neighbors,
Qatar has spent extensively on lobbying in Washington.
Scholars say that those efforts are at least partly
motivated by the state’s political insecurity. Qatar is often overshadowed by
larger, more powerful neighbors including Saudi Arabia and Iran.
The bribery charges have also highlighted a recent change in
European Union policy toward Qatar. Amid an energy crisis following recent sanctions on Russia, the European Commission has increasingly embraced Qatar as
a source of natural gas. Ms. Metsola, the Parliament president, suggested
reconsidering that pivot.
“We would rather be cold than bought,” she said this week.
The scandal seems set to ensnare more lawmakers, as the
Belgian authorities have raided several aides’ residences. It has also caused
deep mistrust.
“I thought the political fights we had were based on honest
political assessments leading to different conclusions,” Ms. Neumann said. “But
now I know that I was most likely fighting against a corruption network.”"
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą