UPDATED ON:
Monday, September 24, 2007
19:22 Mecca time, 16:22 GMT
News Middle East
Israeli PM faces corruption inquiry
Olmert's office has called the police inquiry a "needless investigation" [AFP]
Israeli police have been ordered to open a criminal investigation into the purchase of a home in Jerusalem by the prime minister.

Ehud Olmert is accused of having received an effective bribe when he and his wife purchased the property for an estimated $300,000 dollars below market price, a justice ministry statement said on Monday.
A complaint filed by an investigative journalist has alleged that he received the discount in return for using his influence to speed up building permits from Jerusalem city hall.

Olmert, who was mayor of Jerusalem between 1993 and 2003, has denied any wrongdoing in the case.
Israel's main government watchdog, the state comptroller's office, first investigated the complaint and gave its findings to Menachem Mazuz, the attorney-general, who order the police inquiry.

'Needless investigation'

"This is a needless investigation," a statement issued by the Prime Minister's office said.

"We are sure and completely certain that the process of purchasing the Olmert family apartment on Cremieux Streets was innocent and correct."

"We are sure and completely certain that the process of purchasing the Olmert family apartment on Cremieux Streets was innocent and correct"

Prime minister's office statement
The statement said the price the prime minister paid for the home was in line with real estate market conditions at the time.

"The prime minister will co-operate fully with the investigation in order to bring it to as swift a conclusion as possible."

The case is the latest of several corruption inquiries Olmert has faced since he took office last year.

Police are already investigating Olmert's role, as finance minister, in the privatisation of Bank Leumi, Israel's second biggest commercial bank, in 2005.
   
Suspicions in that case focus on whether Olmert tried to tailor the sale offer to give preference to a friend, who ultimately never bid on the bank.

Olmert has denied any wrongdoing and he is expected to be questioned by police soon.

Mazuz is also considering whether to instruct police to investigate whether Olmert, as industry and trade minister in 2003, appointed acquaintances to a government-funded business authority and helped secure official funding for a factory represented by his former law partner.

Israel's leadership has been damaged by a series of corruption and other scandals over the past year, which have contributed the failing approval ratings of Olmert and his governing coalition.
  
Moshe Katsav, the former president, was involved in a sex scandal and Avraham Hirshson, the finance minister who has since resigned, was investigated over corruption allegations.
 Source: Agencies
 
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