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Lover And Aide Claims MP Mike Hancock Urged Lobby Group To Pay Her

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  • Lover And Aide Claims MP Mike Hancock Urged Lobby Group To Pay Her

    Lover And Aide Claims MP Mike Hancock Urged Lobby Group To Pay Her
    by Melanie Newman

    Bureau of Investigative Journalism
    http://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/2011/11/18/mike-hancock-urged-lobby-group-to-pay-lover-aide-claims/
    Nov 18 2011

    Liberal Democrat MP Mike Hancock solicited cash from a controversial
    organisation for his parliamentary aide and lover Katerina Zatuliveter,
    according to allegations in papers filed at the Special Immigration
    Appeals Commission.

    Ms Zatuliveter, who has been accused of being a Russian spy while
    having an affair with the MP, said Mr Hancock approached The European
    Azerbaijan Society (TEAS) on her behalf in the middle of 2009, when
    he was a member of the hugely important defence select committee.

    Mr Hancock has not denied the claim but he refuted a suggestion Ms
    Zatuliveter was lobbying for TEAS while simultaneously acting as
    his researcher.

    Ms Zatuliveter's statement, made in her appeal against deportation
    for suspected espionage on behalf of Russia, says she had spent £2000
    on legal fees relating to her visa and was running into financial
    problems.

    She added: 'Mike was also very worried about my financial situation
    and what would happen to me. He suggested to The European Azerbaijan
    Society that they might pay me for the lobbying and consultancy work
    that I had done for them as his parliamentary researcher over a number
    of months. They very kindly made a payment of £3,000 to me on the 22
    June which is referenced in my bank accounts'.

    As the Bureau has previously revealed, TEAS is a lobby group whose
    funding sources are unclear and which is run by the sons of a powerful
    Azeri minister.

    Around a month before the payment Mr Hancock hosted a discussion for
    TEAS at Portcullis House on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region. He was also a speaker at a TEAS reception
    in September 2009.

    The Bureau asked Mr Hancock, who was a member of the defence select
    committee at the time of the payment but has since resigned from this
    position, whether he had asked TEAS to pay Ms Zatuliveter.

    A spokesman for the MP replied: 'Mike is aware that Ms Zatuliveter
    assisted on a project for The European Azerbaijan Society. She had
    friends in Azerbaijan and got in contact with the society while working
    in Parliament. Any work she did was in her own spare time and was of
    her own volition. He was never informed of how much Ms Zatuliveter
    was paid and he does not know when they paid her for the work she did.'

    Ms Zatuliveter told the Commission her work for TEAS included
    organising a photographic exhibition in Parliament on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Neither the work for TEAS or the payment
    appears in the Commons register of interests of members' secretaries
    and research assistants for 2009-10. The spokesman for Mr Hancock said:
    'All staff working in Parliament and in Mike's office are informed
    of the requirements to register interests.'

    A spokesman for TEAS said: 'It is a matter of public record that Ms
    Zatuliveter assisted us with a photographic exhibition highlighting
    the plight of the 865,000 refugees and internally displaced persons,
    together with an event for the Azerbaijani community, for which her
    fee was £3,000. She had attended some of our previous events, and
    offered her assistance in a private capacity. We used her because
    at the time TEAS was quite small and new to the UK, and did not have
    sufficient internal resources.'

    In February 2009 Mr Hancock also tabled an Early Day Motion calling
    for the conflict to be resolved and highlighting the UK's position
    as the largest foreign investor in Azerbaijan. His spokesman said:
    'EDM 893 stemmed from Mike's work on the British delegation to the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, and had nothing
    to do with The European Azerbaijan Society. He has a longstanding
    interest in the region going back to the breakup of the USSR in the
    late 1980s and early 1990s.'

    Earlier this year the Guardian reported that Conservative MP Mark
    Field was a paid member of the TEAS advisory board while also sitting
    on the intelligence and security committee, which scrutinises the
    security services. The newspaper suggested Mr Field's position with
    TEAS created a conflict of interest, which was denied by Mr Field.

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