Millennium Post

EU vows ‘zero tolerance’ after reported farm budget abuse

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BRUSSELS: The European Commission declared on Monday it has "zero tolerance for fraud" after the New York Times alleged the gigantic EU agricultur­e budget shores up political corruption in eastern member states.

The Commission has "very clear rules for how funds should be managed" and "takes any allegation of misuse very seriously," spokesman Daniel Rosario insisted.

Spokeswoma­n Mina Andreeva said the EU anti-fraud office, OLAF, looks into such allegation­s and added that the main responsibi­lity for correct spending of the budget falls on member state government­s.

"We are not here to replace national government­s," she said. "We cannot and will not do the work for them."

The defensive statements came a day after a detailed New York Times report alleged that some of the EU'S 59-billion-euro (USD 65-billion) farm subsidies from its common agricultur­e policy (CAP) prop up "oligarchs and political patrons" in eastern countries including, notably, Hungary and the Czech Republic.

The report found the system to be "warped by corruption and self-dealing" and argued that it had become too important to keeping the European Union together to be fundamenta­lly reformed.

The Commission spokespeop­le shot back by saying that past abuses

had been caught and referred to OLAF, and further investigat­ions are ongoing.

But they admitted the European

Union is only now about to get its first European Public Prosecutor's Office to go after wrongdoing involving EU funds that national government­s are unable -- or unwilling -- to prosecute.

"We have a framework in place and this framework is working,"

Rosario said.

He added that "we are actually following up" on issues of conflict of interest as highlighte­d in the New York Times piece, which focused on alleged patronage under the system by Hungary's populist –and anti-eu –prime minister, Viktor Orban.

The CAP is a much coveted line in the EU'S budget. It consumes about 40 per cent of the bloc's overall budget, making it the largest single area of its spending.

While the Commission has proposed reducing it, major EU members including France and Spain firmly argue to maintain it, seeing it as essential in developing the Union and its cohesion.

The New York Times alleged the gigantic EU agricultur­e budget shores up political corruption in eastern member states

 ??  ?? Mina Andreeva, European Commission Spokeswoma­n
Mina Andreeva, European Commission Spokeswoma­n

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