On Thursday (16 May), German authorities searched the premises of Petr Bystron, a top candidate for the far-right Alternative for Germany in June’s EU election, to investigate alleged bribes by Russian officials.
Bystron is second on the Alternative for Germany’s (AfD/ID) EU election list and has been accused of receiving money from Russia in connection with the sanctioned news platform Voice of Europe.
The politician, who currently sits in the Bundestag, rejected the accusations but has so far not commented on the police searches.
Leading up to the searches, involving eleven prosecutors and around 70 police officers, the German Bundestag revoked the parliamentarian’s immunity. The search involved Bystron’s offices in the German parliament, as well as premises in three Bavarian counties, in addition to an object on the Balearic Island of Mallorca.
The two AfD leaders, Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla, called the waiver of immunity and the searches a “serious matter”. So far, “no evidence has been presented for the accusations against Mr Bystron that have been made for weeks”, they said in a statement on X.
The Munich Public Prosecutor General’s Office explained in a press statement that it “is conducting an investigation against a member of the Bundestag on initial suspicion of corruption of elected officials and money laundering,” without naming Bystron himself.
According to a spokesperson, “documents and data carriers were seized, which will subsequently be analysed with regard to incriminating or exculpatory evidence”.
For the German far-right party, this development comes on top of a slew of recent scandals, now involving both of their two top candidates for the EU elections in June. While lead candidate Maximilian Krah was brought into connection to the Voice of Europe revelations as well, he is alleged to have close relations with China.
In addition, Krah’s parliamentary assistant was arrested for being employed by the Chinese intelligence service.
Other scandals involving the party at large have cost it dearly in recent opinion polls. According to an INSA poll for Bild am Sonntag, the AfD has lost six percentage points, falling from 23% to 17% since the start of 2024, its lowest level in a year.
The Russian connection
At the beginning of April, it became known that Bystron was suspected by the Czech intelligence service of receiving €20.000 from the Russian-friendly Ukrainian oligarch Viktor Medwedtschuk, known as the main finance man of the recently sanctioned Russian propaganda network Voice of Europe.
The Czech secret service is said to have an audio recording of Bystron in Medwedtschuk’s car, where the alleged money transfer is suspected to have happened.
Media reports at the time cited a Czech member of parliament as saying that Bystron was “rustling money on the recording and counting it”.
The foreign policy expert of the German far-right is known to be one of the most ardent advocates of Russia within the AfD.
After summoning Bystron to explain himself when the allegations first became known, the party’s leadership demanded that the Czech intelligence make the evidence of collusion public, stating that until then, the party “must assume Bystron’s innocence”.
Various party members, however, see their colleague as someone capable of such connections, several party sources told Euractiv.
[Edited by Oliver Noyan/Zoran Radosavljevic]