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Mafia State corruption reports lands on Attorney General’s desk

In-Cyprus · 2026-06-22

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: Cyprus's Anti-Corruption Authority delivered a nearly 3,000-page report on corruption, implicating several officials, including former President Nicos Anastasiades, to the Attorney General and Tax Commissioner. • Why it matters: The report, which suggests potential criminal prosecution for seven officials, marks a significant development in Cyprus's largest corruption investigation, raising questions about the integrity of high-ranking officials and the judicial process. • What to watch next: Observers will be monitoring the Attorney General's response and whether any criminal proceedings will be initiated against the implicated officials, as well as discussions regarding the recusal of key legal figures from the case.

Local corruptionpresident anastasiadesTop News Mafia State corruption reports lands on Attorney General’s desk Anastasiades Kratos Mafia 1536x1068 Relevant News Mafia State corruption reports lands on Attorney General’s desk 22 June 2026 Overnight pharmacies on Monday, June 22 22 June 2026 Dozens injured, 18 missing after blast during restart at giant Qatar LNG site 22 June 2026 Fanis Makrides 22 June 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber Cyprus’s Anti-Corruption Authority delivered its nearly 3,000-page Mafia State report to the Attorney General and the Tax Commissioner on Monday morning, setting in motion the next phase of the island’s largest corruption investigation. The report — stored across four archival boxes — arrived at the Law Office of the Republic shortly before 11:00, along with evidentiary material transmitted digitally via portable storage device. The original documents remain in a secure evidence room at the Authority’s premises. Around the same time, Tax Commissioner Sotiris Markides received a copy of the report without the evidentiary material, which the Authority said was not needed for the purposes of the tax audit he will conduct. Seven officials face criminal and tax scrutiny The tax audit will examine financial data relating to seven officials whom the Authority’s report recommends be considered for criminal prosecution. They are former President Nikos Anastasiades, former Deputy Attorney General Rikkos Erotokritou, Haris Solomonides, Nicos Kouyialis, Giorgos Varnava, Eva Rossidou-Papakyriacou and Ioannis Sotiriades. The Authority found reasonable suspicion that Anastasiades committed seven potential corruption-related offences, including one felony count of abuse of power, according to findings published on June 16. Anastasiades has denied all wrongdoing. Background The investigation was launched as a self-initiated probe in late 2022, following the publication of Mafia State, a book by investigative journalist and former presidential aide to Anastasiades, Makarios Drousiotis that portrays Cyprus as a systemically corrupt state and levels allegations against Anastasiades and other senior officials. Four inspecting officers — led by Australian international law specialist Gabrielle McIntyre alongside Cypriot lawyers Harilaos Chrysanthou, Orestis Nikitas and Andreas Efthymiou — heard testimony from around 150 witnesses across approximately 200 sessions. The Authority has stressed that its findings rest on the civil standard of balance of probabilities rather than the criminal standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt, and that the presumption of innocence applies to all named individuals, with only the courts empowered to determine guilt. The question of whether Attorney General Giorgos Savvides and Deputy Attorney General Savvas Angelides should be recused from overseeing the criminal proceedings has been raised by both Anastasiades and Drousiotis’s lawyer, Leto Cariolou. @en.philenews Former President Nicos Anastasiades is at the centre of findings released by Cyprus’ anti-corruption watchdog. The report examines the Focus Maritime case and several other matters, but no court has ruled on the allegations. Will the findings lead to prosecutions, or will the case go no further? #cyprusnews #breakingnews #corruption #politics ♬ original sound – en.philenews Read more: Cyprus corruption probe: what happens next after Mafia State findings Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News Overnight pharmacies on Monday, June 22 Dozens injured, 18 missing after blast during restart at giant Qatar LNG site Temperatures to exceed 40C in European heatwave as three die in France Suspect hid body under straw after Kofinou murder, then demanded ransom from victim’s father, court hears UK PM Starmer says he will resign Cloud iridescence appears in the sky over Sana’a On this day: France signed the terms of surrender with Germany in WWII in 1940 Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.

Source: In-Cyprus
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