The Japan Times - Businessman or politician? Billionaire Czech PM under fire again

EUR -
AED 4.180274
AFN 72.280878
ALL 94.077654
AMD 418.93848
ANG 2.037953
AOA 1043.789616
ARS 1695.423603
AUD 1.65257
AWG 2.048877
AZN 1.933339
BAM 1.953783
BBD 2.293293
BDT 140.282742
BGN 1.92467
BHD 0.429154
BIF 3397.721442
BMD 1.138265
BND 1.476051
BOB 7.896711
BRL 5.944706
BSD 1.138605
BTN 108.517087
BWP 16.254937
BYN 3.317218
BYR 22309.99674
BZD 2.289996
CAD 1.618556
CDF 2589.553219
CHF 0.92072
CLF 0.026768
CLP 1053.533371
CNY 7.733885
CNH 7.731495
COP 3857.569176
CRC 518.255976
CUC 1.138265
CUP 30.164026
CVE 110.553986
CZK 24.222339
DJF 202.292133
DKK 7.474481
DOP 67.669143
DZD 151.760358
EGP 55.870614
ERN 17.073977
ETB 181.154906
FJD 2.556828
FKP 0.858611
GBP 0.856971
GEL 3.005023
GGP 0.858611
GHS 12.936422
GIP 0.858611
GMD 83.661025
GNF 9982.585369
GTQ 8.683884
GYD 238.179978
HKD 8.927396
HNL 29.879871
HRK 7.538158
HTG 148.873724
HUF 355.890163
IDR 20516.887666
ILS 3.398295
IMP 0.858611
INR 108.610699
IQD 1491.696466
IRR 1566252.832182
ISK 143.808073
JEP 0.858611
JMD 179.065178
JOD 0.807027
JPY 184.959548
KES 147.154721
KGS 99.541224
KHR 4567.284099
KMF 492.868755
KPW 1024.439024
KRW 1768.647469
KWD 0.352043
KYD 0.948904
KZT 545.727139
LAK 25610.965722
LBP 102137.310682
LKR 382.498484
LRD 207.021987
LSL 18.668575
LTL 3.361001
LVL 0.688525
LYD 7.301942
MAD 10.708229
MDL 20.136862
MGA 4880.309477
MKD 61.659926
MMK 2389.914688
MNT 4078.38565
MOP 9.199343
MRU 45.678004
MUR 53.668965
MVR 17.58649
MWK 1976.028356
MXN 19.980764
MYR 4.65557
MZN 72.729421
NAD 18.667328
NGN 1565.080548
NIO 41.666212
NOK 11.288073
NPR 173.627739
NZD 2.005697
OMR 0.437667
PAB 1.138605
PEN 3.89062
PGK 4.983336
PHP 70.242328
PKR 316.722365
PLN 4.29299
PYG 6920.735163
QAR 4.149544
RON 5.226234
RSD 117.380167
RUB 88.195425
RWF 1668.696695
SAR 4.273276
SBD 9.162015
SCR 15.115318
SDG 683.531104
SEK 11.069968
SGD 1.4746
SHP 0.84983
SLE 27.745221
SLL 23868.85502
SOS 650.524945
SRD 42.690068
STD 23559.790246
STN 24.928007
SVC 9.962542
SYP 125.814834
SZL 18.665603
THB 37.922464
TJS 10.532344
TMT 3.983928
TND 3.345076
TOP 2.74067
TRY 53.139889
TTD 7.729886
TWD 36.3217
TZS 2987.943711
UAH 51.043894
UGX 4172.619916
USD 1.138265
UYU 45.771952
UZS 13582.345392
VES 720.035442
VND 29936.94231
VUV 136.703789
WST 3.165383
XAF 655.269151
XAG 0.019232
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.076219
XCG 2.052046
XDR 0.81388
XOF 653.931269
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.590888
ZAR 18.675231
ZMK 10245.749096
ZMW 20.72924
ZWL 366.520911
  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • CMSC

    0.3100

    21.95

    +1.41%

  • CMSD

    0.2800

    22.18

    +1.26%

  • GSK

    -1.1200

    51.3

    -2.18%

  • NGG

    -2.6900

    80.18

    -3.35%

  • AZN

    -5.7600

    183.86

    -3.13%

  • BTI

    -1.2000

    60.56

    -1.98%

  • BCE

    -0.4900

    21.02

    -2.33%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    31.38

    -0.92%

  • RIO

    -1.5800

    93.35

    -1.69%

  • BP

    -0.8000

    36.15

    -2.21%

  • VOD

    -0.2150

    13.01

    -1.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.94

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    19.5

    +2.05%

  • BCC

    -2.1500

    75.48

    -2.85%

Businessman or politician? Billionaire Czech PM under fire again
Businessman or politician? Billionaire Czech PM under fire again / Photo: Michal Cizek - AFP

Businessman or politician? Billionaire Czech PM under fire again

Since entering politics in 2011, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis has been grappling with a conflict of interest as a billionaire businessman and politician, and his latest stint in power is no exception.

Text size:

Babis, a Donald Trump fan who has been back in office since December, insists he obeyed Czech law when he transferred his Agrofert food and chemicals group to the RSVP Trust fund run by an independent administrator last month.

But the European Commission, the anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International and media at home and abroad are scratching their heads.

"The RSVP Trust statutes confirm that Prime Minister Babis has not resolved his conflict of interest," said David Kotora, heading Transparency International's Czech branch.

"The Czech law is so vague that he may pass... but we are convinced that he will fail to comply at the European level," he told AFP.

A European Commission notice from 2021 defines a conflict of interest as a situation wherein a "financial actor's" impartiality is compromised "for reasons involving... economic interest or any other direct or indirect personal interest".

Besides having a say on the Czech budget, Babis attends European Council talks on the EU budget as premier.

Agrofert said it received the equivalent of $80 million in Czech and EU subsidies in 2024, and $103.5 million in 2023.

Before taking office, Babis vowed to "irreversibly" transfer Agrofert to RSVP Trust, saying his children will inherit the holding after his death.

"I have no influence on Agrofert and I have and will not have any profits from it," said Babis, the seventh wealthiest Czech worth $4.6 billion according to Forbes magazine.

But the RSVP Trust statutes recently published by the Seznam Zpravy news site say the independent administrator will only run the fund while Babis is a government member.

When he quits, the management will be passed onto three of Babis's four children, who could theoretically put Babis back in charge.

- 'Complicated' -

Under the statutes, the fund will manage Agrofert and then pass it on to Babis's offspring "in order to ensure the long-term fulfilment of their material needs".

Bohumil Havel, a business law expert from Prague's Charles University, said the statutes were "complicated" and enabled "multiple interpretations".

He told AFP Babis most probably complied with the Czech conflict of interest law, dubbed "lex Babis".

"However, there is the general rule... that each government member must avoid a conflicting behaviour benefiting for instance their relatives," Havel added.

Kotora also said Babis would be interested in "passing the assets on to his children".

"He said it was irreversible and that he will never get Agrofert back. Which is not true because the fund enables that," he added.

Transparency International has also slammed Babis for keeping other businesses including the chemicals and investment group SynBiol.

Babis, who calls Transparency International "a corrupt NGO", blames local political opponents for stoking the problem.

"They have made up this conflict of interest. And they are only trying to harm me, to get me out of politics," he told AFP recently.

- Deja-vu -

It is a deja-vu for Babis who transferred Agrofert to two trust funds when he first served as premier from 2017 to 2021, but publicly available documents showed he was still its beneficial owner.

The Czech finance ministry stopped asking the EU for subsidy payments for Agrofert following an EU audit.

The group only had to return some domestic subsidies, including $5 million for Babis's bakery equipment.

The European Commission inquired about the current allegations in a letter on February 19.

"The answer is being drafted and we cannot anticipate... We will respond to all questions asked by the European Commission," regional development ministry spokeswoman Veronika Lukasova told AFP.

For Kotora, the letter from Brussels is a good sign.

"The premier said nobody in the EU administration was interested. So this has been refuted," he said.

Earlier this month, the Czech parliament declined to strip Babis of immunity to face trial over EU subsidy fraud worth $2.5 million from 2007.

Babis is charged with taking a farm out of Agrofert to make it eligible for a subsidy for small companies -- a case he calls "clearly politically motivated".

S.Ogawa--JT