Former Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta is being investigated for alleged financial improprieties connected to another political figure's 2012 visit to Bucharest, prosecutors said today.
Prosecutors didn't identify the prominent visitor. But Sebastian Ghita, a businessman who was questioned today, told the Mediafax news agency that the probe focused on a visit by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Prosecutors also questioned Ponta today.
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They said Ponta arranged the visit so it looked like it was initiated and organized by non-political groups and that he benefited from press coverage of the visit.
Blair visited Romania in March 2012 and gave a keynote speech on the future of Europe.
In exchange for sponsoring the visit, Ponta, who was prime minister from 2012 to 2015, allegedly promoted the businessman within the party to help him win a parliamentary seat and a four-year term in the Chamber of Deputies.
Ponta and Ghita both deny wrongdoing.
Ponta is being probed on suspicion of using his authority to obtain money, goods or other improper benefits and being an accomplice to money laundering.
Prosecutors put Ponta under judicial control today, meaning he has to report to prosecutors, needs to get permission to leave the country, cannot talk publicly about the probe or make public comments about prosecutors.
Prosecutors' spokeswoman Livia Saplacan says the foreign visitor is not being probed.
In another case, Ponta is currently on trial for corruption-related charges stemming from work he did as a lawyer from 2007-2008.
He denies wrongdoing.
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