A leaked recording that appears to show senior officials discussing ways to bypass campaign spending limits and trade charitable donations for political access has triggered high-level resignations and a criminal investigation in Cyprus.
Cyprus’ first lady who led a state-created charity and the director of the president’s office have resigned on Monday after a leaked video appeared to capture discussions about skirting campaign finance limits and allowing the charity to be used as a conduit for access to the country’s most powerful officials.
The first lady, Philippa Karsera Christodoulides, announced on Sunday that she would step down as chair of the Independent Social Support Body, a charity that provides financial assistance to students in hardship. In a statement, she said the decision was intended to protect her family’s integrity amid what she described as false and malicious attacks, and insisted that no member of the charity’s board had personally benefited from its activities.
On Monday, Charalambos Charalambous, the director of the president’s office and the president’s brother-in-law, said he was also resigning to safeguard the credibility of the presidency and the government. President Nikos Christodoulides confirmed that he had accepted the resignation.
The resignations followed the circulation of an eight-minute video posted last week on X by an unidentified account. The footage appears to show Charalambous and a former government minister, Giorgos Lakkotrypis, speaking with people presented as foreign investors about presidential campaign financing and access to senior officials. The video suggests efforts to bypass Cyprus’s statutory campaign spending cap, including through the use of cash contributions.
“In the elections they have a cap of about one million,” Lakkotrypis, a former energy minister, appears to say in the recording. “So sometimes they have to depend on cash to be able to go above that budget.”
In the video, Mr. Lakkotrypis directs the alleged investors to Charalambous, presenting him as the key intermediary for campaign-related matters and access to the Presidential Palace.
The footage also briefly features the chief executive of Cyfield, one of Cyprus’s largest construction companies, who claims to have donated hundreds of thousands of euros to the student aid charity and says the contributions afforded him “close and easy access” to the president — an assertion that implies such donations could influence government decisions.
The charity at the center of the controversy, the Independent Social Support Body, was established by law in 2014 and operates outside the national budget, relying on voluntary donations and oversight by the auditor general. First Lady Christodoulides has chaired its governing committee since March 2023, shortly after her husband was elected president.
President Christodoulides has denied any wrongdoing and said he was considering abolishing the charity altogether. His government has described the video as misleading and potentially part of a hybrid attack aimed at undermining the reputation of the country, particularly as Cyprus prepares to assume the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union.
Fact Check Cyprus, an independent watchdog, said the video showed no obvious signs of manipulation through artificial intelligence, while cautioning that the identities of those who produced and released it remain unknown.
Police said they were investigating the video’s origin and authenticity, and the attorney general has ordered an inquiry into whether it documents criminal offenses or constitutes a coordinated attempt to destabilize the country.
The controversy has revived scrutiny of the charity’s finances. According to a November report by the auditor general, donations to the fund surged to 2.3 million euro in 2023 — a fivefold increase during the year of Christodoulides’s election — and remained elevated in 2024, while spending rose sharply. The report warned that several donors had ongoing financial ties to the state, raising risks of conflicts of interest.
Efforts by lawmakers to require disclosure of donors contributing more than 5,000 euro were struck down last year by the Supreme Court on privacy grounds after being challenged by the president. The auditor general has since urged that the charity accept funds only from donors who consent to public disclosure above a defined threshold.
