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EU Probes Corruption Claims At Turkish Gov't Agency

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  • EU Probes Corruption Claims At Turkish Gov't Agency

    EU PROBES CORRUPTION CLAIMS AT TURKISH GOV'T AGENCY

    13:53 â~@¢ 05.03.14

    The European Commission has launched an investigation into allegations
    that a Turkish government agency misused EU funds, the Hurriyet Daily
    News reports.

    The probe follows reports in Turkish media of tender-rigging and
    illegal recruitment at the Centre for EU Education and Youth Programs
    in Ankara under former EU minister Egemen BagıÅ~_.

    "The audit follows allegations of irregularities relating to a lack
    of transparency for staff recruitment and a lack of compliance with
    EU and national rules for procurement by the national agency," the
    Commission's education spokesman Dennis Abbott told AFP in an emailed
    statement March 5.

    BagıÅ~_ was replaced as EU minister after he was implicated in a
    major government corruption scandal that has set off the worst crisis
    in Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's 11-year rule.

    Dozens of Erdogan's key business and political allies were rounded
    up in December over allegations of bribery in construction projects,
    money laundering, gold smuggling and illicit dealings with Iran.

    Turkey's interior, economy and environment ministers all resigned
    from their posts after their sons were detained. The controversy has
    since widened to implicate Erdogan himself, after recordings were
    leaked online last week in which the premier can allegedly be heard
    discussing with his son hiding large sums of cash and conspiring to
    extort a bribe from a business associate.

    The premier has accused supporters of self-exiled Islamic scholar
    Fethullah Gulen, who wields considerable influence in the judiciary
    and police, of launching the corruption probe to destabilize his
    government ahead of key local elections on March 30 and presidential
    elections in August.

    Erdogan retaliated by sacking hundreds of police and prosecutors
    believed to be linked to Gulen, who denied any involvement in the
    scandal.

    Armenian News - Tert.am

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