Opposition parties have slammed the government's handling of the Spuerkeess sanction tied to the Caritas fraud, saying Prime Minister Luc Frieden and Finance Minister Gilles Roth failed to provide clear answers.

Luxembourg's opposition parties remain unconvinced by government explanations regarding the fine imposed on Spuerkeess in connection with the Caritas fraud scandal, despite responses from Prime Minister Luc Frieden and Finance Minister Gilles Roth to parliamentary questions on Thursday. Opposition lawmakers criticised the government's handling of the case, accusing it of withholding information from parliament.

MP Sam Tanson of The Greens (Déi Gréng) said the Chamber had a constitutional right to be informed and lamented that no closed-door session was held to brief MPs in due time. MPs Taina Bofferding of the Luxembourg Socialist Workers Party (LSAP) and Marc Baum of The Left (Déi Lénk) both expressed disbelief that Roth had not even informed the prime minister about the sanction against the State Bank and Savings Bank, questioning the government's communication and effectiveness.

Baum said this raised concerns about whether ministers were still capable of governing together and denounced Spuerkeess for trying to keep the sanction hidden. Bofferding argued that transparency was essential after the Caritas scandal, stressing the need to "put all the cards on the table" and "learn lessons".

MPs thus demand concrete action. Tanson called for clarity on what steps Spuerkeess had already taken to improve its compliance systems. MP Tom Weidig of the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR) went further, insisting that those responsible must face personal consequences and warning that, if no one is identified, ultimate responsibility lies with the bank's director.

Spuerkeess leadership is expected to appear before the parliamentary finance committee in two weeks' time to provide further explanations.