Never a dull moment in Brussels

aps1080
Community Member

 

All you politician haters, check this out. Except for the UN, The biggest ivory tower ever built by the socialists.

 

I love the 13% tax rate, wow.

 

So this is what they get up to while sitting in their ivory towers thinking up stupid rules

to enforce on countries.

 

Sex pest cases, fraud or porn but Eurocrats keep their jobs

 

Inside the glittering buildings that line Brussels' Rue de la Loi, unseemly behaviour is often met with little more

than a slap on the wrist

 

European Commission officials have fiddled their expenses, sexually harassed colleagues and watched hundreds of hours of pornography in the office – yet kept their jobs.

Disciplinary records obtained by the Sunday Telegraph show how dozens of senior officials at the European Commission accused of serious misconduct have escaped with little more than a slap on the wrist.

They include officials who submitted false invoices and attempted to secure jobs for family members on contracts they managed.

In two years, the Investigatory and Disciplinary Office of the Commission (IDOC) investigated 84 cases of suspected misconduct among officials. Some 43 staff were sanctioned, and six dismissed.

Life at the Commission is frequently well rewarded. One in five staff take home more than David Cameron does from his £142,000 a year salary, thanks to generous living allowances and a special 13 per cent tax rate.

 

Yet some employees regard it as a gilded cage, with staff underworked and bored yet unable to find comparable remuneration elsewhere.

Those found to have flouted the rules and yet kept their jobs included four officials who failed to declare the family allowances paid to them by their home countries while working for the commission – meaning they received more allowances than they were entitled to from the commission.

The “grossly negligent” act resulted in a “significant financial loss” and was only discovered by chance. They were demoted, two temporarily.

In another case, an official lied about their home nationality during the recruitment process, “and then produced documents which had been tampered with”. They were demoted for one year.

Another official who lied about his nationality in order to receive a higher expatriation allowance was demoted. It was a second offence, but the official allowed to remain in post after showing “remorse”.

In a further case, a “very senior” commission official who wrongly received “substantial” sums of rental allowances over several years had his pension docked for three years.

Another bureaucrat received family, education and medical allowances for his son for four years in a “persistent and deliberate” fraud – when the young man was in fact in work. The official had his pension docked for three years after a criminal conviction.

One official was reprimanded after presenting the administration with an “altered” medical certificate after his doctor refused a diagnosis.

In another case, an official requested a period of leave “on personal grounds” while “at the same time, without requesting prior permission, offered his services to the Commission as a remunerated external consultant.” They were reprimanded.

The records reveals how one official was dismissed for “embezzlement” – while others accused of attempting to secure jobs or contracts for their family members kept their jobs.

“A staff member who recommended some people he knew, including his sister-in-law to a contracting party of the Commission with a view to obtaining employment for them, received a reprimand. As he was responsible for the execution of the contract, he placed himself in a situation of conflict of interest liable to adversely reflect upon the reputation of the Institution,” the records reveal.

In another case: “A caution was given to another staff member who requested a false invoice for a member of his family under a contract he was responsible for. The isolated nature of the incident was taken into consideration in not opening a disciplinary procedure.”

Another official was cautioned after they “made use of a vehicle owned by a contracting party to the Commission for the transportation of his personal belongings. Although he was responsible for the execution of the contract with the party in question, the very limited nature of the service rendered and the isolated nature of the incident meant that the opening of a disciplinary procedure was not justified in this case.”

The records reveal a number of cases of lewd and violent behaviour in the European Commission’s Brussels offices.

In one case: “A staff member who was responsible for more than 100GB of downloaded material (equivalent to 200-300 hours of on-line video) from over 100 sexually explicit websites was downgraded. The fact that this was his second offence of this nature was an aggravating factor.” Another was sanctioned for “ frequent and intensive” use of pornographic websites.

Another civil servant received a reprimand “for conduct of an explicit sexual nature towards two colleagues at the place of work”, while another was chastised for “physical aggression and insulting remarks towards a colleague [which] cannot be excused by a state of tiredness brought about by intense working conditions."

Another official who used his position to access the personal data of a colleague “for private ends” was reprimanded.

Staff who were dismissed included a contractor who submitted a forged diploma during the recruitment process, and an official who refused “over several years” to do his job, which he "considered to be beneath his level of academic training".

Peter Bone, the Conservative MP for Wellingborough, said: "It seems EU bureaucrats live in their own sort of world with their own rules, totally different to those of normal government. If these things had been done by a British civil servant, they'd have been fired.

“It shows that the EU is not there for people of Europe, but the Brussels elites."

A European Commission spokesman said: “The Commission is one of the most transparent institutions in terms of its personnel matters. It has a robust, fair and impartial approach to disciplinary matters and does not hesitate to impose serious sanctions when it finds evidence of wrongdoings, including demotions and dismissals.”

Message 1 of 23
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22 REPLIES 22

Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels

Your opinion only, without any reference to any facts. Daily Telegraph not known for basing stories on facts.

Interesting those who have an aversion to others posting news articles and make a fuss about that, then do the same themselves.
Message 11 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels


@am*3 wrote:
Your opinion only, without any reference to any facts. Daily Telegraph not known for basing stories on facts.

Interesting those who have an aversion to others posting news articles and make a fuss about that, then do the same themselves.

"Interesting those who have an aversion to others posting news articles and make a fuss about that, then do the same themselves."

 

Woman LOL

 

Are you referring to yourself?

 

 

 

Message 12 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels

Your reply doesn't make sense in relation to my comment :).

I stopped off in Brussels a few of years ago when traveling in Europe. The public transport drivers were on strike, accom was very expensive on week days because the EU parliament is based there. Other parts of Belgium are good though.
Message 13 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels

 

Well travelled, aren't we ? Gov't funded trip ? Smiley LOL

 

 

 

 

Message 14 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels


@am*3 wrote:
Your reply doesn't make sense in relation to my comment :).

I stopped off in Brussels a few of years ago when traveling in Europe. The public transport drivers were on strike, accom was very expensive on week days because the EU parliament is based there. Other parts of Belgium are good though.

Your reply doesn't make any sense to my comment.

 

I watched a DVD about corruption in senior government echelons in Brussels.

That has about as much relevance to the topic as your post above.

Message 15 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels


@icyfroth wrote:

Charming lot, aren't they?

 

Reminds me of that show on SBS - Salamander, set in Brussels and also dealing with government corruption.

 

Screened only 2 episodes then taken off the air. Too close to the facts?

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salamander_(TV_series)

 

We ended up having to buy the DVD set to be able to finish it.


It think you may be wrong AGAIN. The series started on SBS 1 and was transferred to SBS 2. No reports of it being taken off air anywhere

Message 16 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels

If you should have said EU why did you actually say UN? Did you mean to say the EU or did you think you were talking about the UN. Do you actually know the difference between the two organisations?

 

 You refer to one - or both - of them as being , The biggest ivory tower ever built by the socialists.

 

The UN was set up in 1945 and it's charter signed by delegates from the following countries:

China, USSR, UK, USA, France, Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist  Republic, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Ecuador, Egypt, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Iran, Lebanon, Liberia, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Syria, turkey, Ukraine, Union Of South Africa, Uruguay, Venezuela, Yugoslavia. (I think I may have missed a few - there were 50 altogether. Poland signed later.)

 

Perhaps you would care to tell us how many of these countries had a socialist government in 1945.

 

The Founding Fathers of the EU were: 

Konrad Adenauer, Joseph Bech, Sicco Mansholt, Jean Monet, Winston Churchill, Paul Henri Spaak, Alcide De Gasperi, Atiero Spinelli and Walter Hallstein.

 

You can check them allout here and see how many of them were Socialists.http://europa.eu/about-eu/eu-history/index_en.htm

 

If you want to comment on corruption in the upper echelons of the EU that's fine, but to  to iembellish those comments with demonstrably false right wing propaganda,  is just silly and stops people from taking your argument seriously.

Message 17 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels

What part of 'except the UN' did you not understand ?

Appalling sentence structure and punctuation but the subject matter was pretty clear.

Message 18 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels


@tezza2844 wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

Charming lot, aren't they?

 

Reminds me of that show on SBS - Salamander, set in Brussels and also dealing with government corruption.

 

Screened only 2 episodes then taken off the air. Too close to the facts?

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salamander_(TV_series)

 

We ended up having to buy the DVD set to be able to finish it.


It think you may be wrong AGAIN. The series started on SBS 1 and was transferred to SBS 2. No reports of it being taken off air anywhere


That's just as irrelevant to this topic as Am's post and my response to it,

Message 19 of 23
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Re: Never a dull moment in Brussels


@icyfroth wrote:

@tezza2844 wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

Charming lot, aren't they?

 

Reminds me of that show on SBS - Salamander, set in Brussels and also dealing with government corruption.

 

Screened only 2 episodes then taken off the air. Too close to the facts?

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salamander_(TV_series)

 

We ended up having to buy the DVD set to be able to finish it.


It think you may be wrong AGAIN. The series started on SBS 1 and was transferred to SBS 2. No reports of it being taken off air anywhere


That's just as irrelevant to this topic as Am's post and my response to it,


Does that mean all your responses are just as irrelevant 

Message 20 of 23
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