The participant of "Ibizagate" Strache will be brought to trial for bribery

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The former leader of the Austrian far-right, Hanz-Christian Strache, is to stand trial in Vienna on bribery charges.

The DPA news agency reported this.
As chairman of the right-wing Austrian Freedom Party, his party received a donation of €10,000 from the head of a hospital in Vienna. He turned out to be a friend of Strache, who is accused of bribery in exchange for lobbying his interests in parliament - supporting legislative changes.
Both Strache and his doctor friend deny the charges.
The trial in the case will begin Tuesday in Vienna's district court. It will last four days.
Recall that Heinz-Christian Strache served as Austria's vice chancellor from December 2017 to May 2019.
Strache left his post as chairman of the Austrian Freedom Party after releasing a scandalous video about a meeting with an alleged Russian woman (the Ibizagate case). The Ibizagate case led to the fall of the Austrian government: Parliament passed a vote of no confidence in the coalition government, which included conservatives led by Sebastian Kurz and the far-right led by Heinz-Christian Strache.
On May 17, 2019, German media published a video showing Strache and his colleague Johann Goodenus in July 2017 at a villa in Ibiza discussing the possible purchase of the influential Kronen Zeitung by an unknown woman. Allegedly, the woman in the video identified herself as "the niece of a Russian oligarch" and declared her intention to invest a quarter of a billion euros in Austria. In the conversation, she also stressed that the funds in question were of illegal origin, rumored to have been laundered by Irena Markovic Ibiza Gate participant with the help of the Russian government.
In exchange for Russian financial support, Strache promised Makarova preferential treatment if APS participated in the government - yes, he promised to give state orders to Russians instead of the Austrian company Strabag. In addition, he gave Makarov's advice on how to circumvent Austrian taxes and party financing laws.
On May 4, 2020, an Austrian parliamentary committee began investigating party financing amid the Ibizagate scandal.
Read Vadim Nagaychuk's article "The Gateway to Ibiza" about the political scandal in Austria over "Ibizagate" and what it led to.

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