OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
It’s a Spectacular Scandal, and a Warning to
Europe
March 15,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/15/opinion/european-parliament-qatargate.html
By
Alexander Clapp
Mr. Clapp
is a journalist based in Athens.
ATHENS —
It’s like something out of a crime novel. On an early December morning last
year, after months spent staking out residences and tapping phones, Belgian
police officers raided dozens of places across Brussels. Over the next three
days, in apartments and hotel rooms and offices, they seized laptops,
cellphones and approximately 1.5 million euros, or $1.6 million, in cash.
By the next
week, four people had been arrested on charges of corruption, including two
representatives, one former and one present, of the European Parliament. Antonio
Panzeri, a retired member from Italy, eventually admitted to being the scheme’s
ringleader. Eva Kaili, a parliamentary vice president from Greece, continues to
proclaim her innocence from a prison cell. Last month, two other members of
Parliament were arrested in connection to the scandal.
As for the
cash, all signs pointed to Qatar. Over the previous three years, Mr. Panzeri
and Ms. Kaili had delivered one gushing sound bite after another on the Gulf
state’s dubious human rights record. In 2019, Mr. Panzeri called the country “a
reference” for human rights. In November 2022, one day after the opening
ceremony of the World Cup in Qatar, Ms. Kaili hailed it as a “front-runner in
labor rights.” Though Qatar denied the allegations, the scandal soon acquired
the name “Qatargate.”
The
revelations are bad enough. More intriguing is what the scandal reveals about
the European Parliament itself, the least consequential institution of the
European Union. There is a reason Qatar most likely directed cash at members of
a representative body that can propose no legislation on its behalf, commands
no foreign policy of its own and garners scant attention even from those who
vote it into office.
It was easy
and cheap.
The
European Parliament may be the only elected body of the world’s second-largest
democratic electorate, but its powers have never been very substantial. Since
1958, it has operated on the margins of Europe’s Council and Commission — the
two institutions that form the bloc’s executive body — existing largely to
amend their laws, approve their budgets and occasionally veto their proposals.
It was not, to put it mildly, any grand stage of democratic deliberation.
But by the
early 2000s, as the bloc introduced a common currency and began absorbing
former Communist states to its east, it seemed possible that the European
Parliament could evolve into Europe’s answer to America’s Congress: a muscular
institution that would supersede local parliaments and draw large numbers of
Europeans to the polls.
It never
happened. The body remains poorly known and less discussed. Since it's unable
to draft legislation or regulate taxes or conduct foreign policy, its concerns
relate less to “politics” — big questions about how Europeans should live and
work — than to “policy,” often of a narrowly technocratic nature. A typical
parliamentary agenda consists of specialized committees deliberating on issues
such as cellphone roaming fees and clean aviation.
Even so,
money flows through Brussels, as it does in any seat of government. And
Parliament’s history shows it to be serially vulnerable to corruption. The most
notorious incident occurred in 2006, when an audit of more than 160 members
revealed astonishing abuses of power, such as inflated salaries and no-show jobs.
The body spent years attempting to bury the report, but similar stories
continued to surface.
In
response, greater transparency was pledged. Yet to this day the
cash-for-influence industry in Brussels remains unusually — perhaps
deliberately — murky. Many of its 12,000 lobbyists may be familiar names, but
no rules dictate whom many Parliament members can meet or whether they need to
publicize those meetings; there are merely “recommendations.” As recently as
2018, members voted down measures that would require disclosing how exactly
their work gets done — including, for instance, how and where they use their
monthly expenses.
In part,
that’s surely because being a member of Parliament is widely treated as a
transitional position. Attendance is poor, turnover high and conflicts of
interest difficult to untangle, let alone eradicate, in a body in which
one-fourth of its members admit to working a second job. When they do retire, a
third of them shuttle out to better-paying lobbying firms.
Elected to
Parliament in 2004, Mr. Panzeri is a one-man illustration of the dangers of
such a permissive atmosphere. In 2018, as head of the subcommittee on human
rights, he pioneered a “cooperation understanding” with Qatar’s National Human
Rights Committee. After his retirement a year later, Mr. Panzeri moved to the
private sector and founded a nongovernmental organization called Fight
Impunity. He set it up in an attractive townhouse in Brussels next to the
British ambassador’s residence and decorated its honorary board with E.U.
stalwarts, including a former foreign policy chief and a former migration
commissioner.
Within
months, Fight Impunity began organizing conferences and publishing earnest
reports on the state of women’s rights in Afghanistan and the Rohingya
genocide. Such activities were, to be sure, legal. The problem is that beneath
the veneer of credibility, Mr. Panzeri was running a shady side operation. It
reportedly first involved Morocco, which had begun courting Mr. Panzeri during
his time in Parliament.
The details
are not yet verified, and the legal case is still pending Mr. Panzeri’s full
confession to the Belgian authorities. But according to the testimony of Ms.
Kaili’s partner — a former parliamentary assistant to Mr. Panzeri and a
co-founder of Fight Impunity — Mr. Panzeri set up the organization for the
explicit purpose of processing bundles of Qatari cash that began arriving in
Brussels in 2019. Far from fighting impunity, Mr. Panzeri was apparently
responsible for a series of speeches over the next three years attempting to
bestow it.
The
striking thing about Qatargate isn’t even the dishonesty of the alleged scheme.
It’s the nothing-to-see-here candor of it all. Mr. Panzeri and Ms. Kaili hung
out evidence of their wrongdoing like so many articles of drying laundry.
Neither bothered moving the cash to a place where a quick police search could
not find it. Mr. Panzeri kept some of it in a suitcase beneath his bed. Ms.
Kaili — who styles herself one of Europe’s staunchest proponents of
cryptocurrency — stashed it among her daughter’s diapers.
For Qatar,
the deal was no doubt too good to turn down. For a price amounting to about
half an hour’s worth of natural gas revenue, representatives of a parliament
that routinely pillories the human rights records of states like Haiti and
Belarus anointed Qatar a humanitarian standout. For years now, the Gulf state
has been expanding its influence, at much greater cost and out in the open. In
Britain it controls more London real estate than the crown. In France it has
purchased the country’s most popular soccer team. And in the United States it
has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on election campaigns, donated hundreds
of millions to universities and pledged to inject billions into infrastructure.
The
difference between billions of dollars passed through banks and real estate
companies and millions of euros lodged in closets and suitcases is perhaps one
of aesthetics. But the scandal is a lesson, a warning even, to Brussels. Even
in the more rudimentary elements of statecraft — regulating foreign influence
and constraining outside interests — Europe still has a long way to go.
Alexander
Clapp is a journalist who has written for, among other publications, The London
Review of Books, Foreign Policy and The Economist.
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