Tag: Brussels

  • ​EU diplomats lean on NABU as corruption scandals engulf Zelensky, Brussels

    ​EU diplomats lean on NABU as corruption scandals engulf Zelensky, Brussels

    On 2 December 2025 Belgian federal police, acting on orders from the European Public Prosecutor’s Office and with OLAF investigators in tow, raided the headquarters of the European External Action Service in Brussels, the College of Europe campus in Bruges, and several private homes.

    Three people were detained for questioning: Federica Mogherini, former EU High Representative and current rector of the College of Europe; Stefano Sannino, ex EEAS secretary-general now a senior Commission official; and a College manager.

    The case centres on a 2021–2022 tender for the EU Diplomatic Academy training programme, a modest €654,000 contract that the College won under circumstances that prosecutors say stink of rigged bids, leaked inside information, conflicts of interest, and breach of secrecy rules.

    What would normally be just another Brussels procurement scandal has landed like a bomb because it strikes at the very institution that coordinates the EU’s foreign policy at a moment when that policy is wholly consumed by one thing: keeping the war in Ukraine going.

    The timing is brutal. While Belgian cops were turning over desks in the EEAS, Europe’s ambassadors in Kyiv were burning the phones trying to contain a separate explosion. Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) has spent the past year wire-tapping, raiding, and building an airtight case that top figures around President Zelensky embezzled roughly $100 million from energy-sector contracts during wartime.

    READ ALSO; Nigeria’s First Lady gives N50m grant to Rivers PWDS, disabled veterans

    The scheme allegedly involved inflated prices for transformers, kickbacks from grid-repair deals, and cash laundered through Dubai and Cyprus. Some of the skimmed money even ended up in Moscow banks, which is about as dark an irony as it gets when your country is fighting for survival.

    The NABU files name names most Ukrainians thought were untouchable: former energy ministers, current deputy ministers, Zelensky’s old campaign financier Timur Mindich, and in intercepted conversations aides in the presidential office itself. When the first details leaked in November, Zelensky’s approval rating collapsed, protests broke out in Kyiv, and for the first time since February 2022 people were openly calling for the president to go.

    That is when the EU ambassadors swung into action. French and German diplomats, according to multiple Kyiv sources, started meeting Ukrainian editors to “shape coverage” and hunted for back-channel contacts who could lean on NABU to slow things down or narrow the scope.

    One Western diplomat privately admitted the panic: if Zelensky falls or is forced into serious concessions, the entire European narrative of “unlimited support until victory” collapses, and with it the political careers of the current leadership in Brussels, Paris and Berlin. Three years of pouring €100 billion plus of European taxpayers’ money into Ukraine have become the defining legacy of von der Leyen, Macron, and Scholz. An early peace that looks like capitulation would be political suicide.

    Meanwhile, the fallout in Kyiv intensified. Andriy Yermak, President Zelensky’s chief of staff, has now been barred from leaving Ukraine at the request of NABU, with three formal charges reportedly under preparation.

    EU ambassadors reportedly pressed to ease the pressure, but their influence appears limited: Ukrainian anti-corruption authorities are moving forward regardless of external diplomatic pressure. The message is clear—no amount of European lobbying can shield Kyiv’s inner circle from scrutiny, even as Brussels scrambles to contain the political damage.

    But NABU is not a normal Ukrainian agency. It was built from the ground up by the FBI and USAID after 2014 precisely to be independent of local political pressure. Its detectives are trained in Quantico, its budget is ring-fenced, and its leadership knows that any hint of European meddling will be leaked to Washington in minutes. The ambassadors are discovering what several Ukrainian oligarchs learned the hard way: you don’t negotiate with NABU, you survive it or you don’t.

    So you have this surreal split-screen: in Brussels, the EU’s own fraud hunters are hauling away the former face of European diplomacy for a relatively small contract scam; in Kyiv, the same European diplomatic service is frantically trying to shield a wartime leadership accused of stealing on an industrial scale—all because letting the truth fully out risks ending the war on terms Europe can no longer control.

    The contradiction is glaring. Brussels lectures the world about rule of law and transparency, yet its top diplomats are reduced to begging Ukrainian journalists for softer headlines. Europe demands that Ukraine root out corruption as a condition for EU membership, while simultaneously working overtime to keep a compromised government in power because the alternative might stop the fighting.

    In the end the raids in Brussels and the wiretaps in Kyiv tell the same story. The war has become the single organising principle of European elite power, and everything— institutional integrity, anti-corruption principles, even basic coherence— is subordinated to keeping it going for one more season. The Mogherini case is small change compared to the billions that have flowed through Ukraine’s war economy, but it is a warning shot: the same rot that investigators found in a diplomat-training tender exists on a far larger scale in reconstruction funds, arms procurement, and energy deals.

    Europe wanted to turn Ukraine into a moral crusade. Instead it turned the war into a lifeline for two failing political classes—one in Kyiv, one in Brussels—both now clinging to the same sinking ship. The police raids on 2 December were just the first visible crack. There will be more.

  • And Lumumba goes up in Brussels

    Whilst we are still on the subject of resurgent heroes and rehabilitated avatars, it is meet to report that a statute of Patrice Lumumba, the martyred founding president of the much troubled Congo Republic, has gone up in the heart of Brussels with a square named after him in the predominantly Congolese quarters known as Matenge.

    Fifty five years after he was killed and his body brutally dismembered, the killers of this great son of Africa are owning up to a crime against Africa and humanity. The process of historic rectification began in 2002 with an official apology and an admission that something was not right about Belgian colonial policy in Africa.

    This is an awkward closure to a great reckoning in a vast and chaotic country. But it is the best in the circumstances and Lumumba will have to wait for full rehabilitation from his own compatriots. The well of human wellbeing has been poisoned in the Congo and it will take some time before it is drained of its toxic effluvium. It hurts to think that almost sixty years after, this heart of human darkness is embroiled in permanent civil war with a brigand ruling class and international predators bent on plundering the impossibly rich country to death.

    A callow youth with barely four years of formal schooling, Lumumba lacked the intellectual wherewithal and political nous to understand and appreciate the international immensity and national complexity of the forces ranged against him. His only weapon was his outstanding moral authority and spiritual fortitude. This is not nearly enough in a pool of political piranhas.

    But history will vindicate the just. Lumumba will be remembered for his extraordinary heroism and the outstanding courage with which he faced certain death. His memory remains radiant long after the likes of Mobutu, Kasavubu and Tshombe have been consigned to the rubbish heap of history. It is Lumumba statute that is going up while Mobutu’s vainglorious palaces are in utter ruins at home and abroad. It has been a good summer for heroes indeed.

    On a final note, will the family of the  spy who witnessed the assassination and dismemberment of Lumumba and  collected some of his teeth as “souvenir” please return them?

  • Trump arrives in Brussels, ahead of EU, NATO talks

    Trump arrives in Brussels, ahead of EU, NATO talks

    U.S. President

    U.S. President Donald Trump arrived in Brussels from Rome on Wednesday ahead of meeting on Thursday with other NATO leaders and the heads of European Union institutions.

    Having met Pope Francis at the Vatican earlier in the day, Trump will meet Belgium’s King Philippe and Prime Minister Charles Michel in Brussels later on Wednesday.

    This will be the fourth leg of his first foreign trip since he took office.

    Trump was harshly critical of NATO as a presidential candidate, describing the 28-member Western military alliance as “obsolete.”

    He had denounced its effectiveness in the fight against terrorism and complained that other members are not contributing enough to the NATO budget.

    He later reversed his position after meeting with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the White House in April.

    The European Union’s Defence Ministers have been meeting in Brussels to debate how to strengthen Europe’s defence and security as well as working better with and within the NATO military alliance.

    EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini had told reporters that cooperation is key.

    “Investing together, this is the best way to have an efficient European defence.

    “It’s a way of having a rational and efficient joint manner of working on defence.

    “The European Union member states need to overcome the fragmentation in this field and use all the instruments we have in our union,’’ he said.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that cooperation between NATO and the European Union “will be an important issue we will highlight when NATO leaders meet exactly one week from now in Brussels.”

    “That will be the first alliance meeting attended by U.S. President Donald Trump who is pushing for a bigger role for NATO fighting so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, something resisted by France and Germany.’’

    arrived in Brussels from Rome on Wednesday ahead of meeting on Thursday with other NATO leaders and the heads of European Union institutions.

    Having met Pope Francis at the Vatican earlier in the day, Trump will meet Belgium’s King Philippe and Prime Minister Charles Michel in Brussels later on Wednesday.

    This will be the fourth leg of his first foreign trip since he took office.

    Trump was harshly critical of NATO as a presidential candidate, describing the 28-member Western military alliance as “obsolete.”

    He had denounced its effectiveness in the fight against terrorism and complained that other members are not contributing enough to the NATO budget.

    He later reversed his position after meeting with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg at the White House in April.

    The European Union’s Defence Ministers have been meeting in Brussels to debate how to strengthen Europe’s defence and security as well as working better with and within the NATO military alliance.

    EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini had told reporters that cooperation is key.

    “Investing together, this is the best way to have an efficient European defence.

    “It’s a way of having a rational and efficient joint manner of working on defence.

    “The European Union member states need to overcome the fragmentation in this field and use all the instruments we have in our union,’’ he said.

    NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that cooperation between NATO and the European Union “will be an important issue we will highlight when NATO leaders meet exactly one week from now in Brussels.”

    “That will be the first alliance meeting attended by U.S. President Donald Trump who is pushing for a bigger role for NATO fighting so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, something resisted by France and Germany.’’

  • EU to hold Brexit summit on April 29

    EU to hold Brexit summit on April 29

    The European Union’s 27 leaders will meet on April 29 to agree their negotiating lines for Brexit talks after London sends in a formal notification that it wants to leave the bloc, the chairman of the summit, Donald Tusk, said on Tuesday.

    The meeting is a necessary step before the negotiations between Britain and the 27 remaining EU states can start formally.

    London said on Monday it would send in its exit notification on March 29.

    “In view of what was announced in London yesterday, I’d like to inform you that I will call a European Council on Saturday,  April 29, to adopt the guidelines for the Brexit talks,” Tusk told reporters.

    “You know I personally wish the UK hadn’t chosen to leave the EU, but the majority of British voters decided otherwise.

    Therefore we must do everything we can to make the process of divorce the least painful for the EU.”

    The unprecedented talks are due to run for two years, though many diplomats and officials admit it would probably take longer.

    “Our main priority for the negotiations must be to create as much certainty and clarity as possible for all citizens, companies and member states that will be negatively affected by Brexit, as well as our important partners and friends around the world,” Tusk added.

    NAN recalls that the meeting will be held exactly one month after Britain officially notifies the EU of its intention to leave the bloc.

    The U.K. on Monday announced that it will trigger Article 50 and officially begin divorce talks on March 29.

    The formal triggering will take the form of a letter from  May to Tusk, Downing Street said.

    May’s spokesman declined to give further details of the content of the letter, but senior government officials familiar with the government’s thinking expect it to set out a “positive” vision of the future relationship Britain wants with Brussels after Brexit, including a comprehensive free-trade agreement.

  • Buhari’s wife dedicates award to Nigeria military

    Buhari’s wife dedicates award to Nigeria military

    The wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Buhari has dedicated an award she received in the Belgian capital, Brussels, to the Nigerian military men and women.

    This was contained in a statement issued by Special Adviser (Media) to wife of the president, Adebisi Olumide Ajayi.

    Aisha is currently in Brussels Belgium to attend the Crans Montana African Women’s Forum, where Women Heads of State and Government, Ministers, Ambassadors, Parliamentarians, Businesswomen, Activists, Heads of Organisations gathered from all over the World to address the role of Women in the fight against radicalisation and terrorism.

    At the forum Mrs Buhari spoke on “Women’s role in global security”.

    Mrs Buhari said: “I whole-heartedly dedicate the award to the Nigerian military men and women who have lost their lives and those at the war front battling to restore peace in the country

    She was presented the award by Didier Reynders, Belgian deputy prime minister & minister of foreign & European affairs.

  • Brexit vote is irreversible -Merkel

    Brexit vote is irreversible -Merkel

    Britain’s decision to leave the EU is irreversible, German Chancellor Angela Merkel says following summit talks in Brussels with British Prime Minister David Cameron and the bloc’s other leaders.

    “I see no way to reverse that,” Merkel says of the referendum outcome, while adding that the issue was not discussed with Cameron.

    “This is not the hour for wishful thinking the referendum stands as a reality, she said.

    “The atmosphere was serious, amicable and borne by the awareness that this is more of a sad event, but that it is a reality,” Merkel said of the leaders’ talks, noting that consequences now need to be drawn.

  • Paris attack suspect to be extradited to France ‘in few weeks’ – lawyer

    Salah Abdeslam, a key suspect in November’s Paris attacks, would be extradited to France from Belgium in a few weeks to allow for additional questioning by Belgian investigators, his lawyer said on Thursday.

    The Lawyer, Sven Mary said Abdeslam, who returned from Paris hours after the IS attacks in which his brother blew himself up, hid from police for four months until he was captured in a raid on a house in district of Molenbeek on March 18.

    His finger prints were found three days earlier in an apartment in the southern Brussels borough of Forest after a gun battle during which an Islamist gunman was shot dead and four police officers were injured.

    “Prosecutors want to question him about that incident.

    “There is a hearing, which will take place regarding the attempted murder of several police officers during the home search in Forest,’’ Mary told newsmen.
    Abdeslam, who previously said that he wanted to be extradited to France, was not present at a court hearing in Brussels.

    “As I said, he wishes to go to France and that is the reason that things need to proceed and why we hope that it will be over in a few weeks,’’ Mary added.
    The shooting and bombing rampage by IS militants killed 130 people in Paris on Nov. 13.

     

  • Brussels  attack: suicide bomber works as a cleaner

    Brussels attack: suicide bomber works as a cleaner

    Reports have disclosed that one of the ISIS bombers who executed the Brussels attacks  was a worker at the European Parliament as a cleaner.

    The Sun reports that suicide bomber Laachraoui had been employed by a cleaning company contracted by the European Parliament, and took on the role as a summer job while he was a student.

    The 24 -year- old bomber worked in EU parliament between 2009 and 2010.

    According to European Parliament spokesman, Jaume Duch Guillot,  “the European Parliament confirms that seven and six years ago, one of the perpetrators of the Brussels terrorist attacks worked for a period of one month for a cleaning company which was contracted by the European Parliament at the time.

    “As a student, he held a summer holiday job cleaning at the Parliament for one month in 2009 and one month in 2010. Those were the only instances he worked at the Parliament.

    “As required by the contract, the cleaning firm submitted proof of the absence of a criminal record to the European Parliament,” Guillot said.

    Guillot reiterated further that the bomber did not have a criminal record at the time and provided proof of this before taking on the job.

     

  • Brussels airport aims for limited reopening this week

    Brussels airport aims for limited reopening this week

    Brussels airport has on Tuesday commenced a make-shift check-in area after the last week attack.

    According to News Agency of Nigeria {NAN}, a spokeswoman for Brussels Airport said this was aimed at allowing a limited restart of passenger flights in the coming days.

    She said a temporary structure had been put up to bypass the departure area that was heavily damaged when two bombs exploded there last Tuesday.

    According to her, “What we have today is a test to see whether all our procedures are in order.

    “If all requirements were met, the airport could reopen on Wednesday at the earliest, but only at a maximum capacity of 20 per cent,’’ she said.

    She explained that the tests included checking security and fire procedures, as well as operational items such as the handling of baggage and the signs in the terminal.

    The Coordinator for Brussels Airport said initially only a few flights for Belgian flag carrier Brussels Airlines, partly owned by Germany’s Lufthansa, would be allowed to depart.

    He said once capacity was increased, other airlines would be invited to forward their flight plans

  • Terror in Brussels

    • The world must rise in concert to defeat this scourge

    What we feared has happened,” was the plaintive declaration of Charles Michel, the Belgian prime minister as he emerged from a meeting of his country’s national security council hours after the blast.

    Indeed, the coordinated terror attacks on Brussels, the capital of Belgium Tuesday morning, seemed rather long in coming. The three bomb explosions – two at the departure lobby of the Zaventem Airport and one in the Maelbeek Metro station – killed 34 and injured 230.

    Since the terrorists who perpetrated the November 2015 Paris, France attack in which about 130 died were traced across the border to Belgium, the country’s security authorities have been on tenterhooks, so to speak, seeking to circumscribe the killers in their midst in order to preempt and neutralise attacks such as these.

    Indeed, Salah Abdeslam, reputed to be Europe’s most wanted terror suspect was captured a few days earlier in a Molenbeek tenement block in Brussels, an area known to hold the most terror cells in the country, including the group responsible for the November attack in Paris. Immigrant Islamic elements from Molenbeek have been fingered in previous terror attacks such as the 2004 Madrid train bombing that killed 192 and the Charlie Hebdo attack, to name a few.

    The three airport bombers have been identified as two brothers, Khalid and Ibrahim El Bakraoui, who died in the explosions. The third suspect whose device did not detonate and who is now at large is identified as Najim Laachraoui, 24-year-old. He is touted to be an ISIS commander and is alleged to have made the bombs used in the Paris attacks.

    It is instructive that these suspects, including Abdeslam are Muslims of North African origin, especially Morocco. Apart from the fact that ISIS has claimed responsibility for the Brussels bombings, these men are known members of the rampaging Islamic State.

    An attack on Brussels is not only an assault against Europe but the West as a whole. A services driven economy, it is the home base of over 800 international institutions, including the headquarters of the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, NATO. Belgium is in the heart of Western Europe bordered by France, Luxemburg, Germany and The Netherlands. The sea separates it from Britain.

    Expectedly, Western leaders, united in outrage, have vowed to stop the menace. President Francois Hollande of France captured the mood of the moment noting that “the whole of Europe has been hit and the continent must take vital steps in the face of the seriousness of the threat.” President Barak Obama has pledged to do whatever is necessary to help track the terrorists. Prime Minister David Cameron has described the attack as “appalling and savage”, noting that it is a sign that UK faced real terror threat. While German’s Angela Merkel’s spokesman said “the disgusting attack in Brussels will leave us standing together: solidarity with the victims and determination against the terrorists.”

    The gruesome attack on Brussels is yet another of what has become a daily unleashing of evil on an innocent world by people who have been described as heathens masquerading as Muslims. Most of the victims of attacks at the airport and underground train station were soft targets – families going for the Easter vacation, people on their way to work and many connecting flights to other parts of the world. For many of them, their life’s journey ended abruptly and horrifically as Armageddon seemed to come suddenly upon them.

    The world must brace itself and act in concert to fight this rampaging evil. It must be in the subconscious of all peoples of goodwill to realise that no part of the world is safe any longer. There must be a universal consciousness against a burgeoning terror which threatens to overtake the world.

    In Africa, Nigeria which is probably the worst hit so far must lead the charge and relentlessly rally the rest of the continent until terror is not only subdued but totally defeated. We note that it is not only by force of arms but in fact, more by public enlightenment, addressing injustices and inequities wherever they may occur.