SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle has furiously rejected accusations of nepotism being levelled at him by opposition politicians and the media. Commentators wonder whether Germany's top diplomat, so prone to shrill tirades, is diplomatic enough for his job.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, under fire from opposition politicians and media commentators for taking party donors and his partner Michael Mronz on official trips abroad, hit back at his critics over the weekend, dismissing the accusations as "slander" that was damaging Germany.
"Such slander by the opposition against a foreign minister while he is on a foreign trip in the interest of German jobs damages Germany," the leader of the country's pro-business Free Democrat Party (FDP) told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper in an interview published on Sunday. "Political culture has hit a low point when the opposition even attacks the relatives of political opponents for party political gain."
"I've got a very thick skin," the leader of Germany's pro-business FDP said. "Party political defamation campaigns just make me fight harder."
SPIEGEL reported last week that Westerwelle, who is also deputy chancellor in Angela Merkel's government, has been taking friends and party donors on official trips abroad, and that he took part in a ceremony that Mronz had helped organize to mark the opening of a luxury hotel in Bonn.
It also emerged last week that the manager of a company in which Westerwelle's brother, Kai Westerwelle, owns a stake was part of the business delegation accompanying the minister on a trip to Asia in January. Ralf Marohn, the majority owner and managing director of Far Eastern Fernost Beratungs- und Handels GmbH, a trading consultancy, was on Westerwelle's government jet for the four-day trip to Estonia, Japan and China. According to a corporate register seen by SPIEGEL ONLINE, Kai Westerwelle took a €15,000 ($20,600) stake in the consultancy in 2007.
The allegations, together with Westerwelle's controversial remarks about benefits paid to the long-term unemployed, have hit the FDP's opinion poll ratings ahead of a major regional election in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state, in May.
Several media commentators say the accusations against Westerwelle are exaggerated, but that he hasn't done himself any favors with his shrill reaction to them. >>> David Crossland | Monday, March 15, 2010