The former Vice President of the European Parliament, Eva Kaili, who is suspected of corruption, remains in prison for the time being.

The competent court in Brussels extended the pre-trial detention of the 44-year-old Greek woman by a month on Thursday, the responsible public prosecutor announced.

Greek authorities had previously confiscated property belonging to MPs and their partner.

Authorities "seized around 7,000 square meters of land" on the Greek island of Paros that "Kaili and her partner Francesco Giorgi had bought," a Greek legal source said on Thursday.

Accordingly, the Greek financial prosecutor also froze a joint bank account of the couple in Greece, which had been used to purchase the property.

The confiscation of the property came as part of a preliminary investigation into Kaili that the financial prosecutor's office in Athens launched last week, according to legal sources.

In cooperation with the Belgian judiciary, it is about the suspicion of “taking bribes and money laundering”.

In addition, the Greek authority for combating money laundering announced last week that it would freeze all assets of the 44-year-old social democrat.

Appeared in court in Brussels

On Thursday, Kaili appeared before the court in Brussels, which now decided on the detention.

After Kaili's hearing, her lawyer, Michalis Dimitrakopoulos, affirmed his client's innocence.

Kaili "is innocent and has never been bribed," Dimitrakopoulos said.

In addition, her two defenders had applied for Kaili's release with an electronic tag.

Kaili's Greek lawyer Dimitrakopoulos told the AFP news agency last week that Kaili "didn't know" about the existence of the large sums of cash found during a search of her home and was "innocent".

Only her partner could give "answers about the existence of this money".

Investigators found 150,000 euros in the apartment of the Vice-President of the European Parliament, who has since been deposed on suspicion of corruption, and her partner Francesco Giorgi, who works as an assistant in Parliament.

Another 750,000 were found with Kaili's father in a Brussels hotel.

In total, the investigators searched 20 private rooms and MPs' offices between December 9th and 12th.

They found another 600,000 euros with the ex-MEP Pier Antonio Panzeri.

Kaili, Giorgi and Panzeri are three of four suspects now in custody on charges of "membership in a criminal organization, money laundering and corruption".

They are said to have been paid by the Gulf state of Qatar to defend its interests.

The Gulf state has rejected this.