Franse minister beschuldigt Slovenië van handelen uit eigenbelang bij sancties Wit-Rusland (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op vrijdag 23 maart 2012, 18:20.

BRUSSELS - Slovenia flat-out denies getting a Belarus company off the latest EU sanctions list for the sake of a few million euros. But the French foreign minister says it did.

Speaking to press in Brussels on Friday (23 March) after the EU blackballed two Belarusian oligarchs - including a certain Yuriy Chizh - and 29 companies, France's Alain Juppe noted that most of Chizh's firms made it onto the register "except, it is true, with one small exception for one daughter company, because one of the member states, Slovenia, without mentioning it, asked for an exception."

The company - Elite - has a €100-million-or-so contract with Slovenia's Riko Group to build a luxury hotel in Minsk.

Elite and Riko caused controversy in February when Slovenia threatened to veto a whole tranche of Belarus sanctions if they included Chizh. It later agreed to designate 21 jurists and policemen, but Chizh stayed off the hook.

When asked in a separate press briefing on Friday if he cut a deal on Elite, Slovenian foreign minister Karl Erjavec repeated the line he used last month. "We were not in accord with these sanctions [in February] because on the list of economic sanctions there was only one person - Yuriy Chizh - and now we have two persons and for Slovenia this is right because we need to be systematic," he said.

When asked if the Elite-Riko hotel project can go ahead under Friday's agreement, he said: "I don't know." When asked if he had spoken with Riko's CEO in the past two weeks, he said: "No."

The director of Erjavec's political department, Matej Marn, told EUobserver i that Slovenian diplomats at no point in low- or mid-level EU talks asked for Elite to get off. "It was an EEAS i decision," he said, referring to the European External Action Service.

Diplomats from fellow EU countries have a different recollection of events.

"It's not true. They are trying to whitewash the situation. But I don't have instructions from my minister to say it on the record," one of several contacts said. He explained that Slovenia made its position clear in meetings of the so-called 'Coest' working group.

He added that it "set a bad precedent" because Latvia on the basis of the Elite exemption also got two Belarusian companies which do business with Latvia off the register.

For his part, Swedish foreign minister Carl Bildt - unlike Juppe - opted not to rock the boat.

Asked by EUobserver if there was an Elite-Riko deal with Slovenia, he said: "Not particularly, No." He added: "Well, there's always a deal. Everything that we do in the EU is a deal. But I don't want to single out any specific countries on any specific issues."


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