You're reading: Romania parliament boosts criminal immunity, may irk EU

BUCHAREST - Romanian members of parliament voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to boost their immunity from prosecution, a move set to annoy a European Commission already exasperated by Romania's hesitant efforts to tackle high-level corruption.

The deputies approved changes to a law that regulates their
activity, lowering their housing and transport allowances but
also making it harder for prosecutors to investigate them for
graft or conflict of interest.

Romania’s European Union partners have its justice system
under close scrutiny and last year expressed concerns over the
rule of law when the ruling leftist alliance tried to impeach
the country’s president. The EU has also kept Romania out of its
passport-free Schengen area.

Romanian prosecutors need parliament’s approval to launch a
criminal probe against MPs.

Under the previous rules, parliament’s legal committees
would assess the requests and issue a non-binding approval or
rejection before a mandatory vote in the chamber.

With the changes approved on Tuesday, parliament would not
need to vote if the committees reject the requests from
prosecutors.

“This means those prosecutors’ requests that are rejected
will never see the light of day,” said Laura Stefan, a legal
specialist at the Expert Forum think tank. “The process is
likely to be blocked in the committees.”

Lower house speaker Valeriu Zgonea said some of the changes,
such as a ban on deputies hiring relatives, mirrored regulations
for European MPs and were taken after consultation with state
institutions, according to comments carried by local media.

GRAFT BODY’S POWERS CURTAILED

Another change approved by the deputies softens the powers
of the National Integrity Agency (ANI), an anti-graft watchdog
set up after Romania joined the EU in 2007 to investigate the
wealth and potential conflicts of interest among politicians.

The work of the agency has won praise in Brussels.

ANI discovered that 42 lawmakers had conflicts of interest
or amassed dubious wealth in the four years up to 2012.

Deputies who amassed conspicuous wealth or faced conflicts
of interest would automatically lose their seat if they did not
provide evidence to ANI. Now, MPs can hold on to their post
until a final court ruling on their case, which in Romania’s
cumbersome legal system could take years.

“I expect these changes will feature prominently in the
European Commission’s (justice monitoring) report and … that
our Schengen entry will be postponed for a long time,” said
Sergiu Miscoiu, an analyst with the CESPRI political think tank.

“Then there are risks to Romania’s trust and credibility
within the EU, which are already very low, and … perhaps that
will also hurt investment,” said Miscoiu.

Six years after joining the EU, Romania has made little
progress in reforming its state-dominated economy and fighting
widespread corruption.

Previous justice monitoring reports have criticised
parliament for trying to thwart criminal inquiries. Between 2006
and 2012, anti-corruption prosecutors put 23 lawmakers and 15
ministers and deputy ministers on trial.