At least two people on the EU’s Ukraine blacklist have recruited a lobby firm in Brussels to get them off the hook.
The German company, Alber & Geiger, calls itself a “lobbying law firm” and has offices in Berlin and Brussels, but also does litigation in the EU courts in Luxembourg.
It declined to name its clients. But it said they do not include former Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovych. It added that they were not part of the security apparatus and could not be responsible for sniper shootings in Kiev in February because they were “not in office” at the time.
The description fits former Ukrainian PM Mykola Azarov, who lost his post before the sniper killings.
Two other potential clients who fit the profile are Serhiy Kluyev, a pro-regime MP who has business ties with Azarov, and Serhiy Kurchenko, a Ukrainian businessman named by the EU as a Yanukovych bag-man.
Kluyev is still in Kiev and still attends parliament. Kurchenko has told Russian media he is innocent and vowed to clear his name.
Alber & Geiger also declined to disclose its fee, but PR industry sources in Brussels said the type of contract is worth “at least” €80,000 a month.
The firm’s Andreas Geiger told EUobserver that his clients should not be on the blacklist because, under article 215 of the EU treaty, sanctions are meant to coerce governments into changing their behaviour, but the EU list was imposed on 5 March when the Yanukovych regime had already fallen.
“We are going to say [to the EU Council]: ‘Look. You’ve got the wrong people and you’ve got no legal basis, so please take them off the list.’ And if they reject this, we’ll take them to court,” Geiger said.
He added the EU would be “exceeding its competences” if it imposed sanctions as a political punishment or in order to help seize embezzled funds. (more)….
Read the whole story here: http://euobserver.com/foreign/123516
Source: EUobserver - Andrew Rettman