Spiegel and Suddeutsche Zeitung reported on Friday, citing the video recording that they obtained, that in 2017, Vice-Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache, who leads the Freedom Party of Austria (FPO), discussed the possibility of an acquisition of the Kronen Zeitung newspaper by alleged Russian national Alyona Makarova with her in order to secure help at the legislative elections. The outlets claimed that other million-euro deals were discussed at the meetings.
According to Pilnacek, it should be determined if the claims concern a simple chat or "specific instructions for a criminally liable behaviour."
The official noted that prosecutors planned to request the full video from the two media outlets, after which all the necessary steps would be taken.
Pilnacek argued that checking the recording would only be the first step, adding that the question, if an investigation would be launched, was still open.
Spiegel and Sueddeutsche Zeitung claimed that the meeting, which took place on Ibiza back in 2017, before Strache became the vice-chancellor, was also attended by another FPO politician, Johann Gudenus.
Notably, the two politicians told Sueddeutsche Zeitung about "a lot of alcohol consumed" during the meeting, saying they also felt "significant language barrier" during it.
Meanwhile, the Austrian Court of Audit commented on the reports.
"The Court of Audit has to ask the FPO for explanations," the court's spokesman, Christian Neuwirth, wrote on Twitter.
Der #Rechnungshof sieht sich veranlasst, von der FPÖ Aufklärung zu verlangen.
— Christian Neuwirth (@RHSprecher) May 17, 2019
Beate Meinl-Reisinger, the chairwoman of the opposition NEOS party, wrote on Twitter that Strache should step down, saying that "the new elections are unavoidable."
READ MORE: Austrian Ministry Accuses MSM of 'Very One-Sided Reporting' in Leaked Memo
Pamela Rendi-Wagner, the chairwoman of the opposition Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPO), in her turn, wrote on Twitter that the party members had demanded an emergency session of the National Council, the lower house of the Austrian parliament, to be held on May 22, in order for the involved politicians to answer before lawmakers.