Belgian
prosecutors probe whether Huawei paid for letter signed by 8 MEPs
Authorities
are looking into whether the Chinese tech giant made illegal payments for a
letter defending its interests in 2021.
March 26,
2025 4:27 am CET
By Elisa
Braun, Max Griera, Mathieu Pollet and Ben Munster
https://www.politico.eu/article/belgian-prosecutors-huawei-corruption-illegal-payments-letter/
BRUSSELS —
Belgian prosecutors are investigating whether Huawei made illegal payments to
get an open letter written, signed by eight European parliamentarians, which
defended the Chinese tech giant's interests, according to judicial documents
seen by POLITICO.
Belgian
authorities this month raided 21 homes as part of a spiraling probe into
“active corruption in the European Parliament” that “benefitted Huawei.”
Investigators are looking into "excessive gifts" or “remuneration for
taking political positions” that took place “from 2021 to the present day,” the
prosecutors said.
In a second
major test of accountability for the European Parliament after the Qatargate
scandal of 2022, four people have been charged with corruption and criminal
organization and one with money laundering, the Belgian prosecutors' office
said last week.
According to
an arrest warrant seen by POLITICO, first reported on by Italian daily La
Repubblica, a key part of the investigation hinges on a letter sent by eight
MEPs in February 2021 to three EU commissioners, in which they argue
geopolitical tensions should not hinder the development of 5G equipment in
Europe.
That letter,
although it does not mention Huawei by name, is seen as promoting the Chinese
company's interests because it came as several EU governments were rolling out
measures that sought to limit telecom operators’ use of Chinese equipment,
arguing Beijing posed risks because of espionage, surveillance and potential
economic dependency.
Conservative
Italian lawmaker Fulvio Martusciello, one of the signatories, posted the
pro-Huawei letter on X on Feb. 15, 2021, but later deleted it. His former
parliamentary adviser and his assistant have now both been arrested in relation
to the Huawei probe, according to their lawyers. The assistant's contract has
now been suspended.
Cash for a
letter
The arrest
warrant for Martusciello's assistant includes details from the Belgian
prosecutors laying out the heart of the case, in which both she and his former
adviser are alleged to have helped arrange payments for the letter, referred to
as the "5G" letter in the judicial documents.
The
description of the Belgian probe, as provided by the investigative judge in
charge of the case, says: "A sum of €15,000 was offered to the writer of
the 5G letter, while each co-signatory was offered €1,500."
“This
transaction or proposed transaction is said to have been endorsed by HUAWEI's
Chinese executives, in particular by .... [the] director of the Brussels
office,” the document also reads. The director can only be identified as
Abraham L.
Moving on to
bank details of what it describes as "suspicious payments," the
document sets out how the former adviser allegedly arranged for the payments
via invoices "in consideration of alleged consultancy services and
campaign expenses, in the amounts of
€18,450 and €27,500."
"Assuming
the facts are established, these amounts would represent the alleged
compensation for the above-mentioned letter drafted by eight MEPs for the
attention of three European Commissioners in favor of HUAWEI," the
document continues. "The investigation has brought to light the financial
circuit of remunerations which would demonstrate the corruptive process."
As part of a
series of bank transfers, the former adviser wired €6,700 to Martusciello,
€1,000 to his assistant, and €14,800 to another parliamentary assistant, the
warrant says. Several account holders that received payments remain unknown.
Conservative
Italian lawmaker Fulvio Martusciello, one of the signatories, posted the
pro-Huawei letter on X on Feb. 15, 2021, but later deleted it. | Frederick
Florin/AFP via Getty Images
When
contacted by POLITICO, Belgian prosecutors declined to comment on an ongoing
investigation.
Martusciello
did not respond to requests for comment about the bank transfers.
Asked about
Abraham L.'s alleged involvement in a bribery scheme, Huawei did not respond to
a request for comment. A company spokesperson said in an earlier statement:
“Huawei takes these allegations seriously and will urgently communicate with
the investigation to further understand the situation. Huawei has a zero
tolerance policy towards corruption or other wrongdoing, and we are committed
to complying with all applicable laws and regulations at all times.”
Arrests and
allegations
Martusciello's
current assistant was arrested in Italy last week as part of the Huawei probe.
She
"was not involved in the political activities of Mr Martusciello, she only
dealt with logistics," her lawyer Antimo Giaccio told POLITICO, adding she
"was very rarely at the European Parliament ... about 10 times."
Before an Italian judge on Tuesday, she rejected all the preliminary charges
against her but said she stood ready to answer "any questions from the
Belgian authorities," her lawyer added.
The former
parliamentary adviser for Martusciello, who worked for him between 2015 and
2019, was also arrested in Paris last Thursday as part of the Huawei probe, his
lawyer Benoît Martinez told POLITICO. “My client intends to fully cooperate
with the Belgian authorities. He denies any involvement with the charges he’s
suspected of,” he added. He declined to comment further on the charges related
to his client.
The Belgian
secret services, which filed a declassified report that triggered the
investigation, found digital evidence that the former adviser could have been
involved in the drafting of the 2021 letter with one of Huawei's lobbyists, who
can only be identified as Valerio O., the arrest warrant says.
Valerio O.'s
lawyer Denis Bosquet declined to comment.
The
investigators say the transfers can also "be linked to the drafting by MEP
Fulvio Martusciello of legislative amendments favorable to Huawei," and to
a communication in which Valerio O. tells an employee of Huawei in Poland
"that they [Huawei] 'often cross the line and even pay for
amendments.'"
The same
month as promoting the letter, February 2021, Martusciello submitted amendments
to a European parliamentary report that would favor Huawei's position in
Europe.
Martusciello
did not reply to multiple requests for comment about the letter, but told
POLITICO he didn’t know the charges against his assistant. He told Belgian
newspaper Le Soir that he had never received anything from Huawei. “I've never
been to China, I've never been to the stadium, I've never received a cell phone
or any other gift,” he said.
NGO
Transparency International received an anonymous tip in connection to the 2021
letter and forwarded the tip to the EU's OLAF anti-fraud office, it said. The
then-director of the civil rights group Michiel van Hulten this month posted on
Bluesky that OLAF had dismissed the claims because of “insufficient suspicions”
of wrongdoing. A spokesperson for OLAF confirmed it did not investigate the
matter.
Keeping a
distance
It remains
unclear whether any of the co-signatories of the 2021 letter are being
investigated by Belgian authorities as part of the Huawei corruption probe, but
several of those current and former members of the European Parliament are now
taking pains to distance themselves from it.
POLITICO
asked all of them about their involvement. Those who responded said they had
not been contacted by authorities with regard to the letter.
The same
month as promoting the letter, February 2021, Martusciello submitted amendments
to a European parliamentary report that would favor Huawei's position in
Europe. | Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
Italian
conservative lawmaker Herbert Dorfmann insisted the text was Martusciello’s
idea and said he would not have signed the letter had he known it was related
to the Chinese firm. "I have always been politically in favor of keeping
Huawei out of the European market," he told POLITICO. He added neither he
nor his team were offered money "or any other form of compensation in
exchange for [his] signature."
Former MEP
Cristian-Silviu Bușoi, a Romanian conservative, stated he never consented to
signing. “I looked through my official email and found no correspondence
regarding this letter,” he said in a written statement. “I also do not recall
giving verbal consent to Mr Martusciello, as is sometimes customary when
colleagues seek support for their initiatives,” he also said, adding that
neither he or his staff received any compensation nor were aware of any scheme
related to the signature of the letter.
Aldo
Patriciello, a far-right Italian MEP, said in an email: "I honestly
struggle to remember whether the request for my signature came via email, phone
call or WhatsApp." He added that he had no direct or indirect relationship
with Huawei or its lobbyists.
Romanian
conservative Daniel Buda, also a signatory, attributed his involvement to his
team, stating he was informed through a briefing prepared by his office staff.
“My support was solely driven by concerns about rural digital infrastructure,
not influenced by external parties,” he said in an email. He added he had not
been contacted by any investigative authority regarding the letter and that
neither he or his team received any money in exchange for his signature. “I had
no knowledge — neither then nor now — that behind this letter or activity there
could be such a scheme,” he told POLITICO in a written statement.
Former
Italian social-democrat member Giuseppe Ferrandino said: “I am certain I never
signed any letters of such kind" and added he had never been contacted by
any authorities regarding this topic. "Nobody ever offered me money to
influence my parliamentary activity,” he added.
Other
signatories included hard-right Italian lawmaker Giuseppe Milazzo and former
Romanian social-democrat member Tudor Ciuhodaru, neither of whom responded to
POLITICO’s requests for comment. Milazzo told Italian news agency ANSA that he
had never had meetings related to the investigation into the Huawei case:
"I have never been offered and I have never accepted any money, gifts or
any kind of favor, directly or indirectly, from [Huawei]," he said.
According to
conversations with three former Huawei officials, the 2021 letter posted by
Martusciello was meant to counter another open letter from October 2020 in
which over 40 lawmakers urged the European Commission to impose stricter
controls over the use of Chinese equipment in Europe.
In a letter
to European Parliament President Roberta Metsola on Wednesday, 28 members of
the chamber urged the institution to “temporarily set aside any MEPs, credibly
suspected of involvement, from any parliamentary activity relating to Chinese
interests.”
Aitor
Hernández-Morales, Antoaneta Roussi and Paula Andrés Richart contributed
reporting.
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