ArmInfo. A trial on corruption in PACE has begun in Munich. Two former Bundestag members are in the dock. They are accused of actions paid for from Baku in the interests of Azerbaijan, DW reports.
The source notes that the death of the Bundestag member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Karin Strenz was the culmination, but not the end, of the "Azerbaijani scam" - a corruption scandal that erupted in the spring of 2018. Then it turned out that a number of members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) received bribes from Baku for lobbying the interests of the Azerbaijani authorities in Europe. Karin Strenz was one of them. And this Thursday, January 16, the trial of four more defendants in the "Azerbaijani scam" began in Munich. Two of them are also former members of the Bundestag: conservatives Axel Fischer from the CDU and Eduard Lintner from the CSU.
DW notes that the Munich court is a kind of premiere. For the first time in German legal practice, we are talking about the application of paragraph 108e of the Criminal Code of the Federal Republic of Germany - "Bribery of a holder of parliamentary powers."
The first paragraph of this article reads: "Whoever, as a member of the national parliament of the Federation or the Lander, demands an undue advantage for himself or a third party, receives a corresponding promise or accepts this advantage as a counter-obligation in exchange for performing or not performing a certain act in accordance with an order or instruction given to him in the exercise of his parliamentary powers, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term of one to ten years, or in less serious cases, six months to five years." Since 2014, this paragraph also applies to members of international parliamentary organizations.
The Higher Regional Court has scheduled 39 hearings for the trial. The verdict is due on 22 August.
Lintner was a member of the Bundestag for 33 years, served as State Secretary in the Federal Ministry of the Interior during the Chancellorship of Helmut Kohl and sat in PACE. It was there, the prosecutor's office believes, that he lobbied for the interests of Baku, receiving over three million euros for this purpose through front companies from Azerbaijan, which he spent, among other things, on bribing other members of the assembly so that they would vote "correctly". According to the investigation, Karin Strenz received a total of 149,900 euros from him between 2014 and 2017.
Lintner himself acted as an "independent observer" at the elections in Azerbaijan, compiling reports on them that were flattering to Baku - much less critical than those of the OSCE observers. When the scam was uncovered in 2017 thanks to a journalistic investigation, Lintner began to claim that he received money exclusively for the work of his "Society for the Promotion of German-Azerbaijani Relations".
The prosecutor's office came upon Axel Fischer's trail during searches conducted at the home and offices of Lintner and Strenz, the investigation into whom was dropped after her death.
Fischer, a member of the Bundestag from 1998 to 2021, and a member of PACE since 2010, where he even served as chairman of the European People's Party faction for a long time, is accused of bribery and abuse of parliamentary powers. The prosecutor's office believes that in 2011 he offered his services to a representative of Azerbaijan. Subsequently, Fischer, for money, "acted on instructions in the interests of Azerbaijan." Such actions included, in particular, "positive speeches," "prompt transfer of confidential documents" and "voting" in the way Baku wanted.
From 2011 to 2014, Fischer, according to the investigation, received 58 thousand euros for his services, from 2015 to 2016 - another 26,300 euros. The money was transferred to him in cash by the same Lintner.
During the investigation of the "Azerbaijani scam", searches were conducted in 20 apartments and offices, examination of material evidence was carried out at the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), requests for legal assistance were sent, in particular, to Cyprus, Liechtenstein, Belgium, Estonia, Latvia, Switzerland, Turkey and to Azerbaijan itself.
The indictment takes up 160 pages, the investigation materials - 46 archival folders.
According to witnesses, PACE deputies received valuable gifts from representatives of Azerbaijan, for example, jars of black caviar, or simply envelopes with cash. One Swiss MP said that during one of her official visits to Baku, she found a gold necklace with pearls and diamonds on the table in her hotel room.