Former EU foreign policy chief charged with fraud and corruption

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Former EU foreign policy chief charged with fraud and corruption

Federica Mogherini was detained and questioned earlier this week over misuse of EU funds

Former top EU diplomat Federica Mogherini has been formally charged with procurement fraud, corruption, conflict of interest, and violation of professional secrecy, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) has announced.

Mogherini, who was detained on Tuesday, served as both European Commission vice president and foreign policy chief from 2014 to 2019. She was appointed rector of the College of Europe, an elite Bruges university for junior diplomats, in 2020.

In a statement on Tuesday, the EPPO said it launched a probe into the EU Diplomatic Academy – a nine-month program awarded by the EEAS to the College of Europe under Mogherini in 2021-2022 after a tender. The EPPO said it had “strong suspicions” of fraud in the awarding process, adding that it had information that confidential procurement details were shared with the school beforehand, giving it an unfair advantage.

The EPPO initially announced that the rector, a senior College of Europe staff member, and a senior European Commission official had been detained in the investigation. While it did not name the suspects, media outlets quickly linked Mogherini to the case, as the school only has one rector. Reports citing sources also identified senior EU diplomat Stefano Sannino, the EEAS secretary-general from 2021 to 2024, as another person detained.

In a separate statement on Wednesday, the agency said all three “were formally notified of the accusations against them.” They have been released after initial questioning, and no indictments have been issued so far, as the probe is ongoing.

Analysts cited by Politico suggested that the scandal could spark the EU’s biggest crisis in years, given the suspects’ high profiles and the seriousness of the accusations. Other commentators noted that the investigation comes at a time when Brussels is pressuring other countries over corruption, arguing that it has little authority to do so while its own institutions are implicated in a scandal.

Commenting on the scandal, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Tuesday that EU officials “prefer to ignore their own problems, while constantly lecturing everyone else.”

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