Former Budapest mayor Demszky to brief corruption probe committee

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Budapest, February 7 (MTI) – The former liberal mayor of Budapest, Gábor Demszky, is expected to appear before a parliamentary committee investigating corruption surrounding the construction of the city’s fourth metro line, Demszky’s lawyer told Tuesday’s edition of Magyar Nemzet, claiming the former mayor had nothing to hide.

György Magyar said that Demszky’s legal responsibility was not at issue in the matter. The contract for building the fourth metro line was not signed by the metropolitan council but by the companies involved. Political responsibility should be distinguished from legal culpability, he said. Anyone who claims, based on the report by Europe’s anti-fraud office OLAF, that Demszky bears criminal liability violates the law, he added.

Socialist lawmaker Csaba Horváth, who was deputy mayor under Demszky, told the paper that he would also be ready to give evidence to the committee if invited to do so. He likewise insisted that the metro 4 project had not fallen within the metropolitan council’s competence.

Erzsébet Gy. Németh, an opposition Democratic Coalition lawmaker who at the time was a Socialist councillor, told the paper that she would not attend any committee hearings because the report had not raised any question of her liability in the case.

The current city leadership is totally unaffected by the findings of the OLAF report, Budapest Mayor Istvan Tarlós told commercial broadcaster Lánchíd Radio on Tuesday. He said that with a single exception, all the findings of the report related to the period before the 2010 general election. The gravest issue concerns the contract for Alstom trains concluded before the 2006 elections, he added.

“I don’t believe there’s anything to discuss,” Tarlós said, adding that the single exception after 2010 related to a change in control engineers.

The mayor expressed surprise over the declaration by Demszky’s lawyer that the former mayor had had nothing to do with the matter when no one had raised any suspicions. Tarlós said he did not wish to make any accusation that Demszky “might bear any substantive or certain liability, but his behaviour can be considered strange.”

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