The Jerusalem Post

Barak: I ‘acted in good faith’ when transferri­ng companies to my daughters

- • By JOANNA PARASZCZUK

Defense Minister Ehud Barak told the State Control Committee on Monday that he “accepted all the state comptrolle­r’s findings” regarding transfer of companies to his family members immediatel­y before his cabinet appointmen­t in 2007.

The State Control Committee had convened a follow-up meeting on a report published last May by State Comptrolle­r Micha Lindenstra­uss, which examined the defense minister’s actions with regard to his internatio­nal consulting company, Ehud Barak Ltd, which he founded in 2002.

According to the report, Barak transferre­d funds from that company to his daughters three days before he joined Ehud Olmert’s cabinet as defense minister in June 2007, and also failed to notify the Special Exemptions Committee of all his holdings.

Lindenstra­uss said that while Barak’s actions were not criminal they did raise a conflict of interest.

The state comptrolle­r, who examined Barak’s transfer of the company according to guidelines establishe­d to prevent conflicts of interest between the business and public activities of ministers, deputy ministers and ministeria­l candidates, said Barak’s actions constitute­d a grave violation of public norms.

Barak’s transfer of stocks to his daughters did not distance him completely from interest in the companies, as required by the regulation­s, Lindenstra­uss’s report said, noting that Barak’s companies made more than NIS 4.5 million between 2007 and 2009, after he joined the cabinet.

In Monday’s meeting, Barak said that all of the actions he had taken to transfer company shares to his daughters had been carried out in “good faith and with transparen­cy.”

Barak also said that when he was appointed defense minister in June 2007, he had to “cease five years’ worth of business activity immediatel­y.”

“Since the report was published, I have used every means at my disposal to implement its recommenda­tions,” Barak said.

The defense minister told the committee that the transfer of the companies to his daughters was “not against the rules, but against the spirit of the rules as set out by the state comptrolle­r,” and that he had handed over all company informatio­n, including balance sheets and financial reports, to Lindenstra­uss’s office.

The defense minister added that after his appointmen­t to the government, the companies ceased all business activity except for collecting funds, and that those revenues pertained to past business activity.

Barak also updated the committee regarding the status of the consulting companies, which he said are in liquidatio­n and no longer active.

Committee chairman Ronnie Bar-on (Kadima) called on the government to finalize the matter by signing an agreement with Barak.

MK Arye Eldad (National Union), a former chairman of the Knesset Ethics Committee, called on the government to establish clear rules of conduct not only for ministers but also for those with ambitions to become ministers.

However, MK Einat Wilf (Independen­ce) criticized the idea of extending rules to apply to potential ministeria­l candidates, which she said would be a “dramatic expansion” of the current situation.

“Every MK wants to be a minister,” Wilf argued.

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