Just as Cyprus’ government should be concentrating on its presidency of the
Council of the EU, it has to firefight controversy at home over a video
circulating online that alleges top-level corruption.
The furor centers on a mysterious video posted on X with a montage of senior
figures filmed apparently describing ways to bypass campaign spending caps with
cash donations, and seemingly discussing a scheme allowing businesspeople to
access the president and first lady. One segment made reference to helping
Russians avoid EU sanctions.
The government denies the allegations made in the video and calls it “hybrid
activity” aimed at harming “the image of the government and the country.”
The government does not say the video is a fake, but insists the comments have
been spliced together misleadingly. The footage appears to have been shot using
hidden cameras in private meetings.
Unconvinced, opposition parties are now calling for further action.
Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides hit back hard against the suggestion of
illicit campaign funding in remarks to local media on Friday.
“I would like to publicly call on anyone who has evidence of direct or indirect
financial gains during the election campaign or during my time as President of
the Republic to submit it immediately to the competent state authorities,” he
said. “I will not give anyone, absolutely anyone, the right to accuse me of
corruption.”
In relation to the reference to payments made by businesses, he said companies
“must also offer social benefits within the framework of Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) for the state, I want to repeat, for the state. And they do
so in the areas of health, welfare, defense, and many other areas.”
The contentious video was posted on Thursday afternoon on social media platform
X on an account under the name “Emily Thompson,” who is described as an
“independent researcher, analyst and lecturer focused mainly on American
domestic and foreign policies.”
It was not immediately possible to find public and verifiable information
confirming the real identity of the person behind the account.
The video includes footage of former Energy Minister George Lakkotrypis and the
director of the president’s office, Charalambos Charalambous.
In the recordings, Lakkotrypis is presented as a point of contact for people
seeking access to Christodoulides. He appears to walk his interlocutor through
the process on payments above the €1 million campaign limit.
In a written statement, Lakkotrypis said it is “self-evident” from the video
that remarks attributed to him were edited in order to distort the context of
the discussions, with the aim of harming Cyprus and himself personally. He added
that he filed a complaint with the police. The police have launched an
investigation into the video, after Lakkotrypis’ complaint, its spokesman Vyron
Vyronos told the Cyprus News Agency.
The video then shows Charalambous, Christodoulides’ brother-in-law, who explains
gaining access to the presidential palace. “We are the main, the two, contacts
here at the palace, next to the president,” he says, adding that interested
parties could approach the president with a proposal and money that could be
directed toward social contributions.
There was no official statement from Charalambous.
The video alleges that social contributions made by companies through a fund run
by the first lady are being misused to win preferential treatment from the
presidency.
Concern over this fund is not new. The Cypriot parliament last year voted
through legislation that called for the publication of the names of the donors
to that fund. The president vetoed that move, however, and took the matter to
court, arguing that publicly disclosing the list of donors would be a personal
data breach. The court ruled in favor of the president and the names were not
revealed.
Stefanos Stefanou, leader of the main opposition AKEL party, said the video
raised “serious political, ethical, and institutional issues” which compromised
the president and his entourage politically and personally.
He called on the president to dismiss Charalambous, abolish the social support
fund and — after the donors have been made public — transfer its
responsibilities to another institution.
AKEL also submitted a bill on Friday to abolish the fund within the next three
months and called for the first lady to resign as head of the fund. AKEL also
requested that the allegations from the video be discussed in the parliament’s
institutions’ committee.
Another opposition party, Democratic Rally, said: “What is revealed in the video
is shocking and extremely serious … Society is watching in shock and demanding
clear and convincing answers from the government. Answers that have not yet been
given.”
Cyprus has parliamentary elections in May and the next presidential election is
in 2028.