Corruption shock in Brussels: Von der Leyen removes senior official linked to Qatar

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The European Commission has terminated the employment of Henrik Hololei, former Director-General for Transport, following the completion of a disciplinary probe into his alleged links to the Qatar bribery network designed to sway key European Union policy decisions. The move, taken during Ursula von der Leyen’s presidency, underscores that the fallout from the Qatargate scandal continues to reverberate within EU institutions.

Hololei, an Estonian national, had previously been sidelined from his post after coming under investigation by OLAF in 2024. The EU’s anti-fraud body examined whether he had accepted gifts from Qatar in return for granting access to sensitive information concerning relations between Brussels and the Gulf emirate, amid heightened diplomatic and economic pressure from Doha.

While OLAF’s inquiry failed to definitively prove the commission of a criminal offense, it did uncover serious violations of the senior official’s professional duties and advised the Commission to pursue the matter under the EU Staff Regulations. That internal assessment has now culminated in his dismissal.

The Commission’s Vice-President for Security and Democracy, Henna Virkkunen, told reporters that the European executive had concluded disciplinary proceedings against “a senior member of staff” for breaching internal rules, though she declined to provide further details or name the individual involved.

Nevertheless, European sources confirm that the official in question is Hololei and that his departure is expected shortly, likely by mid-February, with only a brief transition period to ensure continuity at the helm of the directorate-general. The decision aims to draw a line under one of the most embarrassing episodes for Brussels since the Qatargate scandal broke, widely regarded as the most serious corruption case to hit EU institutions in decades.