
Two senior Australian ministers have been dragged into a snowballing Labor party corruption scandal, admitting accepting hospitality from a former powerbroker at the centre of an explosive inquiry.
Environment Minister Tony Burke and Senate leader Stephen Conroy both stayed at a ski lodge owned by Eddie Obeid, who is the focus of an Independent Commission Against Corruption probe over an alleged “criminal conspiracy”.
Obeid, a former powerful kingpin in the New South Wales state Labor party, is accused of using highly confidential information about a prospective coal licence to enrich himself and his family by tens of millions of dollars.
He has been giving evidence this week in a hearing that has gripped Sydney, with people queuing for hours to get a glimpse of proceedings that have seen him accused of effecting a massive “fraud on the people of New South Wales”.
Obeid denies the allegations that he conspired with the state’s former resources minister to obtain insider information, but in a new twist revealed Burke accepted his hospitality when he was in opposition.
“We are generous people and we like to share our generosity with our friends,” Obeid told the hearing late on Tuesday, fingering Burke and several state politicians, including current NSW Labor leader John Robertson.
Conroy said he too had stayed there once when in opposition.