Brussels: Police search European Commission buildings
Briefly

Brussels: Police search European Commission buildings
"Unnamed sources close to the investigation told both the AFP news agency and the Financial Times that the operation was connected to a real estate deal done with the Belgian state in 2024. A spokesman for the Commission said that the EU's executive branch was "aware of the ongoing investigation" into the sale of some 23 Commission buildings, and was "confident that the process was conducted in a compliant manner.""
"Valued at 900 million in 2024 (roughly $1.07 billion at current exchange rates), the real estate was sold as the Commission downsized its available office space, primarily as a result of more staff working remotely in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic. The properties in question were acquired by the Belgian sovereign wealth fund, the SFPIM. It planned to renovate and revamp them and then put them back on the market as commercial and residential real estate."
"The searches took place early on Thursday, both the FT and later AFP reported, with the EU's European Public Prosecutor's Office (EPPO) confirming only that it was "conducting evidence-collecting activities in an ongoing investigation" involving the Commission. The EPPO is the independent public prosecution office for the EU, responsible for investigating crimes against the bloc's financial interests."
Police executed searches at European Commission premises in Brussels as EU prosecutors carried out evidence-collecting activities linked to a 2024 property sale. Unnamed sources tied the operation to a real estate deal between the Commission and the Belgian state involving about 23 buildings. The assets were sold for 900 million euros as the Commission reduced office space due to increased remote working after the COVID pandemic. The Belgian sovereign wealth fund SFPIM acquired the properties and planned renovations to relaunch them as commercial and residential real estate. The EPPO confirmed its investigative role in protecting the EU's financial interests.
Read at www.dw.com
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