Romania's top general under investigation for suspected corruption


General Vlad Gheorghita, the Romanian Army's Chief of Staff, leaves the headquarters of the military office of the Romanian Anticorruption Directorate, in Bucharest, Romania, June 2, 2026. Inquam Photos/Octav Ganea via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. ROMANIA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN ROMANIA

BUCHAREST, June 2 (Reuters) - ⁠Romanian anti-corruption prosecutors said on Tuesday they had ⁠opened a criminal investigation against General Gheorghita ‌Vlad, the Army's Chief of Staff, on suspicion that he abused his power to unlawfully secure state-funded college seats.

Vlad, the ​highest-ranking active military officer in Romania, ⁠declined comment on Tuesday. ⁠The defence ministry said it was cooperating but could ⁠not ‌comment without interfering with the investigation.

The prosecutors said in a statement that Vlad ⁠was under investigation for aiding and abetting ​a second in ‌command to demand that an additional 20 ⁠state-funded college ​seats be given to the defence ministry in 2025, overstepping their job remit.

The ministry has a few state-funded ⁠places allotted each year at several ​educational institutions such as the College of Physical Education in Bucharest.

Transparency International has repeatedly ranked Romania as ⁠one of the European Union's most corrupt states.

The European Union kept Romania's justice system under special monitoring after it joined the bloc in 2007 but ​the pace of anti-graft investigations slowed ⁠after this was lifted in 2023. The judiciary ​has delivered some high-level acquittals ‌that have raised concerns that ​the Romanian authorities' fight against corruption has lost momentum.

(Reporting by Luiza IlieEditing by Gareth Jones)

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