Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn corruption. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn corruption. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 7 tháng 4, 2013

Mubarak's last PM found not guilty on corruption charge

CAIRO (Reuters) - An Egyptian court acquitted Ahmed Shafik, the last prime minister of deposed president Hosni Mubarak, on a charge of embezzling public funds when he was civil aviation minister, a court official said on Sunday.

Shafik, who is on a watch list at border points, was tried in his absence over allegations that he, former civil aviation minister Ibrahim Mannaa, and former Egypt Air chief Tawfiq el-Asi embezzled over 23 million Egyptian pounds ($3.4 million). All three were found not guilty, advisor Ahmed Yousef said.

Shafik, who was a presidential candidate in 2012, left for Abu Dhabi last June two days after his opponent, the Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Mursi, was declared president.

He still faces another corruption charge over his alleged allocation of 40,000 square meters of state land to Mubarak's sons Alaa and Gamal. The ex-leader's sons are in prison, also facing corruption charges.

Their 84-year-old father will be retried from next Saturday after an appeal to quash his life sentence for the killing of protesters by security forces was upheld.

On Sunday the prosecutor general ordered Mubarak's detention for another 15 days for a separate investigation over corruption charges and embezzling public funds. The move ensures that he will remain in custody.

($1 = 6.8383 Egyptian pounds)

(Reporting by Omar Fahmy; Writing by Asma Alsharif; Editing by Paul Taylor and Stephen Powell)


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Thứ Tư, 3 tháng 4, 2013

Hollande pledges clean sweep amid corruption probe

PARIS (AP) — For a French president who came to power on a promise of "irreproachability," naming a lying tax-dodger to be his chief tax collector was probably not the best move.

Now Francois Hollande is a president on the ropes, reeling from a potentially knockout blow delivered by his ex-budget minister, a man who admitted this week that he had hidden hundreds of thousands of euros from the tax man for decades and lied about it.

Those lies from Jerome Cahuzac came both in front of the National Assembly and to Hollande's own face.

Worst of all for Hollande was that he billed his presidency as a return to morality and simplicity after what his Socialist Party dubbed the "bling-bling" years of his conservative predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy. Now Hollande has handed Sarkozy's opposition UMP party the club it needs to bash him and his Socialist government for the rest of his presidency.

Not that the UMP was waiting. They've already been mercilessly haranguing Hollande and the Socialists for economic mismanagement after the government admitted it would not be able to trim the deficit as far as it had pledged to its European partners.

Cutting that deficit by cracking down on tax-dodgers was part of Cahuzac's job as Hollande's budget minister.

That makes his surprise admission of a once-secret Swiss bank account — after months of denying its existence — embarrassing not only for him but for Hollande's entire cabinet. Many government ministers had taken to the airwaves to swear to Cahuzac's probity and trustworthiness after the muckraking website Mediapart first reported his secret in December.

Hollande made an unusual taped TV appearance Wednesday to respond to the crisis. Shaking his fist in a bid to appear forceful, Hollande called Cahuzac's actions "unpardonable" and "an outrage to the Republic."

At the same time Hollande tried to deflect the blowback the scandal is causing his government with a pointed reference to "the failure of one man."

Hollande sought to get ahead of the scandal by announcing a string of reforms — including banning convicted fraudsters from holding public office and requiring all government ministers and members of parliament to publish details of their personal finances.

It's not clear yet if that will help. Hollande is among the least popular presidents in modern French history after less than one year in office. Recent opinion polls give him an approval rating of barely more than 30 percent.

The disgust felt by French voters was expressed by Philippe Martin, a passer-by walking near the Champs Elysees on Wednesday.

"He dared to look into someone else's eyes and say he didn't have a bank account in Switzerland, that's a disgrace," Martin said.

French voters have grown used to seeing ministers and other top public officials nabbed in various corruption probes.

"This isn't the first time it's happening," said Anne Sedonin, another passer-by in Paris. "It's sad, sad."

The executive editor of Mediapart, the online investigative journalism site, said Cahuzac's admissions will set off "an earthquake" in France's democracy.

Edwy Plenel said what makes the Cahuzac scandal so threatening to the country's democratic traditions "is the attitude of the whole political class," which he said had rallied behind Cahuzac.

"His admission reveals to the French citizens the inadequacy of the majority of that world," Plenel said.

Plenel and others fear this latest scandal will benefit extremist parties such as Marine Le Pen's far-right National Front or the far-left New Anti-Capitalist Party.

Both sides pounced on the chance to score political points, with Le Pen calling for new elections and the NPA raising doubts that others in the government were unaware of Cahuzac's lies.

The opposition UMP party asked the inevitable "who knew what, when?" questions.

"Frankly I find it hard to believe that they only learned the truth 48 hours ago, or else I guess we're being led by a big simpleton," UMP Vice President Thierry Mariani said.

Authorities filed preliminary charges against Cahuzac, a former plastic surgeon-turned-politician, for alleged money laundering. If convicted, he faces up to five years in prison and a 375,000 euro ($481,500) fine.

After months of denials, Cahuzac wrote on his blog Tuesday that he had told investigating judges he had a foreign bank account for 20 years. Cahuzac, who had long criticized the use of overseas tax havens, quit the government last month as the scandal swelled.

On his blog, www.jerome-cahuzac.com, the former minister wrote that he had taken steps to repatriate 600,000 euros worth of holdings now in the account.

Cahuzac also expressed his extreme regret to Hollande, his colleagues, supporters and all French citizens, asking for "forgiveness for the damage I have caused them."

___

Masha Macpherson contributed to this story.


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

AP Interview: Romanian president blasts corruption

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — Romania's president says the country should do more to tackle corruption if it wants to join the European Union's open-border area.

President Traian Basescu told The Associated Press on Thursday that tackling the issue "is a test for the Romanian political class.

"Is it willing to sacrifice two or three corrupt officials for obstructing the national interest or not?"

Basescu says joining the so-called Schengen zone, which includes some 26 countries, should become a national priority for the country of 19 million, which joined the EU in 2007.

The Netherlands has led opposition to Romania and Bulgaria joining the borderless free-travel zone, arguing that it would lead to an increase in organized crime and corruption.


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