Cape Argus

Official denies spying for Russia, ‘underminin­g the EU’

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BUDAPEST: A Hungarian member of the European Parliament went on trial yesterday on charges of spying for Russia.

The initial session of the trial of Bela Kovacs, at the Budapest Regional Court, was closed to the public by the judge because of the classified nature of the case.

Prosecutor­s claim that after he became a member of the EU parliament in 2010, Kovacs maintained “regular, continuous contact” with an intelligen­ce officer of Russia’s secret service. In meetings between October 2012 and February 2014, Kovacs allegedly provided informatio­n on a range of EU matters connected to Russia, including details about energy negotiatio­ns, relations with Belarus, the future of the European banking sector and a possible EU visa waiver for Russia.

Kovacs later also allegedly met and gave informatio­n to another Russian agent, after his initial contact left Budapest.

Kovacs’ activities “actively assisted the work of Russian intelligen­ce”, prosecutor­s said in a summary of the indictment released by the court.

“The ultimate aim of the activity was to form, in the interests of the Russian Federation, an openly anti-EU camp within the European parliament.”

Its “sole task would be to undermine – from the inside – the work” of EU institutio­ns and “to play up Russian interests”, they added.

Kovacs, who resigned from the nationalis­t Jobbik party after his December charging, reiterated his claims of innocence, and continues to work as an EU official.

“My conscience is absolutely clean,” Kovacs told reporters outside the courtroom during a recess.

“I hope the truth will bring victory, at least for me, in the sense that I can calmly continue to work for at least another year in Brussels.”

European parliament elections are expected to be held in May next year.

Defence lawyer Istvan Szikinger noted Kovacs was still being sent on EU missions despite having his parliament­ary immunity lifted in connection with the spying case in October 2015.

“The EU, in a quite consistent manner, sent Bela Kovacs on official assignment­s to places like former Soviet republics where in theory, had he been spying, he could have continued to spy brilliantl­y,” Szikinger said. “But he didn’t spy and he is not spying now.”

In the same trial, Kovacs and three others are also facing fraud charges stemming from the fictitious employment of interns in the EU parliament from 2012 to 2013. Szikinger said he expected the trial to conclude in the first half of next year.

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