CARTOON : First published in NZZ am Sonntag, Switzerland, December 18, 2022 | By Chappatte
Leaks are endangering Qatargate cases, warns
Belgian justice minister
Defense lawyers are likely to seize on spilled info as
a way to shoot holes in the Belgian prosecution’s case.
BY BARBARA
MOENS AND PIETER HAECK
DECEMBER
24, 2022 4:00 AM CET
Belgian
Justice Minister Vincent Van Quickenborne is vowing to leave “no stone
unturned” in the corruption probe rocking the EU, but warns that repeated
leaking of information from the investigation is “dangerous” to securing justice.
Belgium is
on the front line of the biggest investigation into EU corruption for almost a
quarter of a century, amid allegations that Qatar and Morocco bought influence
in the European Parliament. Since December 10, Belgian federal police conducted
a series of at least 20 raids across homes and offices in Brussels, seizing
mobile phones, computers and more than €1.5 million in cash.
Four
suspects have been arrested on preliminary charges of “participation in a
criminal organization, money laundering and corruption.” They include Eva
Kaili, a Greek MEP ousted as European Parliament vice president after the case
erupted, who will stay in jail for at least another month.
Some
lawyers of the suspects are now criticizing the Belgian investigation, with at
least one lawyer writing to the judiciary that “there was a huge problem of
procedure” due to the leaks of key documents to media. Newspapers have indeed
scooped juicy details on discoveries of cash stashes and confessions, which go
well beyond official communications.
The problem
for the Belgian investigators is that the defense can latch onto these leaks to
blow procedural holes in the case, and argue that the entitlement to
professional secrecy and the right to access sealed documents have been
violated.
Upholding rule of law
Van
Quickenborne, speaking in an interview with POLITICO, said the federal
prosecutor’s office had opened a criminal investigation into such leaks to
preserve faith in the judicial process.
“The
defense can use that of course, because the presumption of innocence is another
principle of our rule of law. It is not for the press to start condemning
people in advance. That, of course, is sensitive — that is dangerous,” he said,
speaking from a safe house where he is spending Christmas due to threats
against him by crime groups such as drug gangs.
The Belgian
justice minister was careful not to disclose details of the investigation, as
that could hamper the case. He confirmed, however, that Belgian state security
— working with several other European intelligence services — has been at the
heart of the investigation, adding that the probe began as early as March 2021.
He stressed, “Our Belgian judiciary is working very well with the Italian
judiciary in this file.” Three of the four suspects facing preliminary charges
are Italian.
For Van
Quickenborne, the Belgian investigation shows how investment in the Belgian
justice system, the Belgian intelligence services and the anti-corruption
department within the Belgian police is now paying off. Hosting the European
institutions, NATO and other international institutions comes with
responsibilities, the Flemish politician emphassized. Belgium is not giving
“criminals a free pass,” he noted, and the ongoing investigation “also sends a
signal to those who want to go down the same path in the future.”
“Belgian
state security works not only in the fight against terrorism and extremism, but
also in the fight against espionage and foreign interference,” he said. “We
primarily target countries that seek to destabilize our society,” he continued,
pointing to Russia, China and “rogue states” as countries clearly on the radar
of the Belgian intelligence service.
He also
made reference to his own Christmas under guard. “The situation I am currently
in also proves that organized crime is trying to interfere — through
intimidation and violence — in our society. We have also asked state security
to work very specifically on that, to look at the possible problem of
corruption in our system […] to look at the influence of decisions and
decision-making bodies.”
On the
point of checks and balances, Belgium hopes to cooperate with the European
Parliament to an even greater extent in the future, he said, arguing that more
can be done.
“It’s up to
the European Parliament to organize better control mechanisms with regard to
members of the European Parliament and also to organize more transparency in
its decision-making process. The Belgian judiciary would happily work even
closer together with the European Parliament.”
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