Bangkok Post

PM asks to lift immunity, fight charges

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PRAGUE: Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis yesterday requested that lawmakers lift his parliament­ary immunity so he can face allegation­s of fraud as he fights to win support for a minority government.

Police are investigat­ing whether Mr Babis, the Czech Republic’s second-richest person, illegally received a €2-million European Union subsidy a decade ago by hiding ownership of a farm and conference centre. Babis denies wrongdoing.

Mr Babis made his request before he appeared at a parliament­ary committee hearing on whether to recommend his immunity be lifted.

The lower house was also set to resume debate on a vote of confidence in Babis’s one-party government. He was expected to lose, because most other political parties say the cabinet should not be led by a person under investigat­ion.

Mr Babis’s ANO party won election in October by a wide margin but short of an absolute majority, with 78 of 200 seats in the lower house.

If it loses the confidence vote, the Babis government will stay in office until a new one is formed. He may end up leading any new government; his pledges to weed out political corruption and run government with a businessma­n’s touch have kept him popular.

His situation could be further complicate­d by a presidenti­al election that is heading to a tight run-off on Jan 26-27. It pits incumbent Milos Zeman, who has backed Mr Babis, against Jiri Drahos, who has said it would be unacceptab­le to have a sitting prime minister who faces criminal charges.

Mr Babis reiterated yesterday the allegation­s against him have been fabricated by political and business opponents. He added the case should not be linked to his government’s confidence.

“Citizens are not stupid and know it is a political affair that should damage me since 2016, that should prevent me from being in politics,” he said.

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