- Title: Czech police ask parliament to allow prosecution of PM candidate Babis
- Date: 10th August 2017
- Summary: FORMER CZECH FINANCE MINISTER AND ANO PARTY LEADER ANDREJ BABIS SPEAKING VARIOUS OF AGROFERT HEADQUARTERS (CONGLOMERATE HOLDING COMPANY THAT BABIS FOUNDED AND WAS SOLE OWNER OF UNTIL 2017) PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC (FILE - MAY 3, 2016) (REUTERS) BABIS ARRIVING FOR STATEMENT JOURNALISTS LISTENING (SOUNDBITE) (Czech) THEN CZECH FINANCE MINISTER, ANDREJ BABIS, SAYING: "That's why I said to the president that I don't see any reason why the government should resign, because this will create unnecessary unrest among people who don't understand it." PHOTOGRAPHER (SOUNDBITE) (Czech) THEN CZECH FINANCE MINISTER, ANDREJ BABIS, SAYING: "He (Czech President Milos Zeman) informed me that the prime minister will bring his resignation tomorrow and that he will accept it and he will decide later what to do next." CAMERAMAN BABIS LEAVING TOURISTS AT CASTLE
- Embargoed: 24th August 2017 16:57
- Keywords: Czech police parliament prosecution Andrej Babis
- Location: PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
- City: PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
- Country: Czech Republic
- Topics: Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA0026TKR709
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Czech police have asked the parliament to allow for prosecution of ANO party leader Andrej Babis, the central European country's most serious candidate to become prime minister after an election due in October, the parliamentary speaker said.
Police have been investigating whether a conference centre near Prague, built by a company that Babis owned in the past, may have flouted rules to receive a 50 million crown ($2.25 million) European Union subsidy.
Babis's ANO party leads opinion polls ahead of the October 20-21 election by a double-digit margin ahead of nearest competitors.
Parliamentary speaker Jan Hamacek, a member of the ruling Social Democrats, told Reuters by telephone that they have received a request to agree to prosecution of two members of parliament, Jaroslav Faltynek and Babis.
Hamacek added the request came from a police unit dealing with economic crime but declined to give any details.
The police request will be subject to a vote in the full lower house of parliament. If the house agrees to lift Babis's immunity, police will be allowed to press charges.
A spokeswoman for the Prague state attorney's office told Reuters the request was connected to the case of the subsidies for the conference centre, Stork Nest.
Babis, a billionaire businessman, has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in the case. He was not immediately available for comment.
Prague police, which are in charge of the investigation, refused to comment.
Babis's ANO party is now a junior partner in a three-party coalition led by the Social Democrats of Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka. Babis left the cabinet in May after a row with Sobotka over his business practices.
Faltynek is a deputy chairman at ANO and a former senior official at Agrofert, a holding of over 200 companies Babis owned until moving it to a trust fund earlier this year. - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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