Yahoo – AFP,
March 20, 2015
Italian minister to resign in kickbacks scandal |
Rome (AFP)
- Italy's transport and infrastructure minister announced his resignation on
Thursday after days of revelations implicating him in a corruption scandal
involving his department, his son and a 10,000-euro Rolex watch.
Maurizio
Lupi, who had been resisting calls to quit since the scandal first broke
earlier this week, confirmed to Italian television that he would step down on
Friday after answering questions about the case in parliament.
Lupi
maintained that he had done nothing wrong, saying he was stepping down purely
to avoid further damage to the government's credibility.
"I
believe my gesture will strengthen the action of the government," he said
in a pre-recorded interview with Porta a Porta, the flagship news and
discussion programme of public broadcaster Rai.
"I
have not lost my honour, nor my passion," he added, saying he hoped to be
able to continue his political career.
Lupi, 55,
denied that he had been pressed to quit by Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, as has
been widely reported.
The
minister, and by extension Renzi, had been embarrassed by the steady dripfeed
of damaging reports following the announcement on Monday of an investigation
into the suspected rigging of tenders for major public works projects worth a
total of 25 billion euros ($26 billion).
Among four
men arrested in a probe in which a total of 51 officials and businessmen were
placed under investigation, was Ettore Incalza, a senior official in Lupi's
department until the end of last year.
Lupi had
been particularly embarrassed by the revelation that a businessman who was one
of Incalza's alleged accomplices had given his son, Luca Lupi, a 10,000-euro
Rolex watch.
Examining
magistrates suspect that the same businessman, Stefano Perotti, organised a job
for the recently-graduated son at an engineering firm run by his
brother-in-law, at the request of the minister.
Hand-made
suits
Lupi has
described Perotti as a family friend and wiretap evidence leaked to the press
suggests he was also close to another businessman, Francesco Cavallo, who has
also been arrested in the kickbacks case.
Several
recordings feature Cavallo introducing himself to business contacts as
"Lupi's man."
Others
appear to indicate that he arranged for hand-made suits to be made for the
minister and some of his closest aides, as well as buying flights for Lupi's
wife.
When the job
issue first emerged, Lupi responded by insisting that he would never seek
favours for his children and that to do so "would have been a grave error
and, I presume, a crime."
Twenty-four
hours later a recording emerged of a phone call in which he is heard telling
Incalza: "You must come and meet my son."
Judges
suspect Incalza asked Perotti to arrange things and, within a month, Luca Lupi
was a site manager on a Milan building site which already had 17 managers.
Renzi, who
has made a more effective fight against corruption in Italian life a central
plank of his reforming premiership, was reported to have demanded that Lupi
resign immediately.
The
centre-left leader was unable to simply sack the minister as it would have
risked destabilising his coalition government. Lupi is a leading member of the
New Centre Right (NCD), the junior partner in a coalition dominated by Renzi's
Democratic Party (PD).
The
investigative judges in charge of the kickbacks inquiry believe the four
arrested men were at the helm of a system which enabled them to skim off one to
three percent of the value of contracts for high-speed rail links, new metro
lines in Rome and Milan and other huge projects.
The scandal
is the biggest of its kind since the "tangentopoli" cases of the
early 1990s.
That
episode led to the indictment of half the country's lawmakers but, two decades
later, Italy is still struggling to shake off a reputation for corruption that
economists say has cost the country billions in lost investment.
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