MEP Krah accessed ‘sensitive’ documents, EU
Parliament trade committee chair says
Charges of spying and corruption spark call for
internal parliamentary probe.
APRIL 27,
2024 6:39 PM CET
BY CAMILLE
GIJS, EDDY WAX AND LENNART PFAHLER
The office
of far-right German MEP Maximilian Krah, who is embroiled in espionage and
corruption allegations, has accessed “sensitive” documents from the European
Parliament’s trade committee via an internal online system, committee Chair
Bernd Lange confirmed to POLITICO.
“Over the
years, he has accessed some limited/sensitive documents on SharePoint,” the
internal system, Lange said on Saturday.
Krah, the
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party’s lead candidate in June’s European
election, is being investigated over allegations that he accepted payments from
Russia and China “for his work as an MEP.”
Lange
denied that Krah’s office had retrieved documents with the classification level
“restricted” via the trade committee. The “limited/sensitive” classification
refers to sensitive content that is not necessarily subject to confidentiality.
“Maximilian
Krah has never received any EU Restricted documents” in the trade committee,
Lange said. But Lange said the full extent of the scandal is still unclear.
“It is
really disappointing that we have no clear facts and names from the attorney or
from the secret services,” Lange said. “This creates a situation of mistrust
and uncertainty.”
German
public prosecutors in the city of Dresden earlier this week initiated
preliminary investigations into Krah over the corruption allegations involving
Russia and China. Before that, German police on Monday arrested one of Krah’s
parliamentary aides, identified as Jian G., over claims he spied for China.
The Federal
Prosecutor General accuses Jian G. of having passed on internal European
Parliament information to China. This activity most recently included
information on a motion for a resolution directed against China’s persecution
of minorities such as the Uyghurs and Tibetans, according to German news outlet
WELT. Jian G., a German citizen born in China, is currently in custody. He was
fired by Krah after the allegations came to light.
Krah told
the Süddeutsche Zeitung that a review he had initiated had revealed that Jian
G. did not have access to classified documents.
The
Subcommittee on Human Rights, of which Krah is also a member, is also
investigating whether information may have been obtained. The chair of the
subcommittee, Udo Bullmann, said that Krah had hardly been active on the panel.
“As far as I know, he never received sensitive information during my term of
office, nor did he ask for it. But of course our secretariat has already
started to double- and triple-check the information,” Bullmann said on
Saturday.
Krah’s
office declined to comment for this article.
On Friday,
Terry Reintke and Philippe Lamberts, leaders of the Greens group, sent a letter
to European Parliament President Roberta Metsola calling for a comprehensive
internal investigation.
This
article has been updated.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário