In a tweet Monday, the Czech police department said its inquiries would go beyond the prime minister and include âall citizens of the Czech Republic who are mentioned.â The statement added, âWe wonât provide more information.â
Babis suggested Sunday on Twitter that the Pandora Papers revelations about him are part of an effort to âinfluence the Czech election,â and he said he had done nothing âillegal or wrong.â Speaking on Czech television on Sunday night, he said: âI paid all the taxes. This is completely absurd.â
âThe money was sent from a Czech bank; it was my money, it was taxed, and then it came back to a Czech bank. I categorically deny [the allegations],â he said.
But his political opponents are demanding more transparency from the prime minister. âThis is showing signs of corruption to the core,â Ivan Bartos, chairman of the Pirate Party, said on Czech television Sunday night. The chairman of the right-wing Civic Democratic Party, Petr Fiala, called it âa giant international scandalâ and âa huge problem that the prime minister will have to explain.â
âFor him, it is a big problem,â agreed Milos Brunclik, a political analyst at the Czech Republicâs Charles University, speaking to The Washington Post. âAfter all, he repeatedly portrayed himself as a fighter against nontransparent offshore business.â
In Czech TV talk shows, for example, Babis has frequently emphasized that he and his companies pay taxes in the Czech Republic, said Jiri Pehe, the director of New York University, Prague.
âThis of course puts him in a different light,â said Pehe.
Babis is only a few percentage points ahead of a rival alliance in recent polls, and the âPandora Papers revelations may discourage some undecided voters who have been considering voting for Mr. Babis,â said Brunclik.
But the full impact of the revelations on the election campaign remains uncertain. The Czech president, who largely holds ceremonial powers, could appoint Babis as the next prime minister even if Babis does not hold a parliamentary majority.
Brunclik added that the prime minister has survived other political crises in the past, partially by deflecting criticism and portraying it as part of a concerted campaign to force his departure from Czech politics.
Babis appeared to follow the same script on Sunday night, when he attacked the media outlets that were involved in the Pandora Papers, saying: âThis is not an international consortium. This is the work of our [Czech] mafia.â He called one of the ICIJ partners, the Guardian newspaper, a âleft-wing, neo-marxist and pro-migrationâ publication.
His response to the reports on Sunday came after the ICIJ and several of its media partners had unsuccessfully asked for comment on the 2009 purchase. After several outlets sent questions to the prime ministerâs press spokesperson, the ICIJ said the press accreditations of three partner outlets for a campaign event were revoked.
Babis also ignored questions by a reporter working with a Czech ICIJ partner outlet, with a security guard elbowing her and telling her: âGo away!â
Noack reported from Paris.
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