Greek governing party suspends Euro MP pending investigation
Dec 15, 2022, 12:58 PM | Updated: Dec 16, 2022, 9:41 am
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece’s governing center-right New Democracy party has suspended one of its European Parliament members from the party, pending the outcome of an investigation by European authorities into the payment of an assistant.
New Democracy said in an announcement Friday that the suspension was ordered by party leader and prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis,. It said that while the suspension is in place, Maria Spyraki will not be a parliamentary candidate for the party in the next general elections, which are to be held in the first half of next year.
On Thursday, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office requested the lifting of immunity of Spyraki, as well as one of the European Parliament’s former vice presidents, Greece’s Eva Kaili.
“Based on an investigative report received from the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF), there is a suspicion of fraud detrimental to the EU budget, in relation to the management of the parliamentary allowance, and in particular concerning the remuneration of Accredited Parliamentary Assistants,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
OLAF issued a statement Friday making clear that its investigation was not related to a corruption scandal in which Qatar is suspected of having tried to buy political influence in the European Parliament with cash and gifts.
Kaili, of Greece’s socialist PASOK party, is among four people who have been arrested in what has been dubbed Qatargate. She is in custody pending a Dec. 22 hearing in Brussels. Her partner Francesco Giorgi, who is a parliamentary adviser, has also been arrested and charged. European lawmakers terminated Kaili’s term in office this week.
“There is no link between the issues investigated by OLAF and the issues under investigation in the ‘Qatargate,’ as the matter has been dubbed by many,” OLAF Director-General Ville Itala said in the statement, which added that the anti-fraud office’s investigation was completed on Nov. 23.
In a statement to Greek media Thursday, Spyraki said she was “happy to accept” the request for her immunity to be lifted “in order to make clear that I don’t have a single euro difference with the European Parliament.”
She said the issue concerned the allowance of a former colleague who had faced serious personal issues and had been absent from some European Parliament meetings.
“I have nothing to do with Qatargate, I have nothing to do with any other case,” she said.
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