The Phnom Penh Post

Trudeau gov’t in crisis after minister suddenly resigns

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A CANADIAN minister’s sudden resignatio­n on Tuesday turned vague allegation­s of interferen­ce in the criminal prosecutio­n of an engineerin­g giant into a deepening political crisis for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals.

Jody Wilson-Raybould’s resignatio­n followed a chorus of demands for the government to come clean about whether Trudeau’s office had pressured her to intervene in the prosecutio­n of SNC-Lavalin.

The Montreal-based firm was charged in 2015 with corruption for allegedly bribing officials in Libya between 2001 and 2011 to secure government contracts during former strongman Moamer Kadhafi’s reign.

Jody Wilson-Raybould, who was Canada’s first indigenous attorney general and justice minister prior to being shuffled to another post last month, announced on Twitter that “with a heavy heart” she was leaving the cabinet.

Trudeau said he was “surprised and disappoint­ed”.

“Our government did its job properly and according to all the rules,” he said, while upbraiding his former attorney general, if she felt otherwise, for not bringing her concerns to him directly.

SNC-Lavalin lobbied the government, including senior officials in Trudeau’s office, for an out-of-court settlement that would include paying a fine and agreeing to put in place compliance measures.

A possible guilt y verdict at trial, they argued, risked crip- pling its business and putting thousands out of work.

But according to unnamed sources cited by the Globe and Mail, Wilson-Raybould refused to ask prosecutor­s to settle with the company, and the trial is set to proceed.

Trudeau has denied the allegation­s, saying: “At no time did I or my office direct the current or previous attorney general to make any particular decision in this matter.”

Opposition parties, however, pressed for clarity.

And on Monday the independen­t ethics commission­er launched an investigat­ion – the second into a prime minister first elected in 2015 on a promise to clean up corruption, and with only eight months before the next ballot.

While the controvers­y snowb a l l e d , Wi l s o n - Ra y b o u l d declined to speak, citing solicitor-client privilege and cabinet confidenti­ality.

“I am aware that many Canadians wish for me [to] speak on matters that have been in the media over the last week,” she said in a statement.

“I a m i n t he process of obtaining advice on the topics that I am legally permitted to discuss in t his matter,” she said, adding that she retained a retired Supreme Court justice as legal counsel.

‘Trying to hide the truth’

Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer reacted to her resignatio­n by saying Trudeau’s “ethical lapses and his disastrous handling of this latest scandal have thrown his government into chaos”.

He also accused the prime minister of “trying to hide the truth with regards to the SNCLavalin affair”.

The Canadian charges against SNC-Lavalin were just the latest blow to one of the world’s largest constructi­on and engineerin­g firms, after its former president and senior executives were accused of fraud, and the World Bank banned it from bidding on projects until 2023 due to “misconduct” in Bangladesh and Cambodia.

The company, its internatio­nal arm and another subsidiary are accused of having offered C$47 million ($36 million) in bribes to officials and of defrauding the Libyan government of C$130 million.

It oversaw billions of dollars in projects in Libya, including constructi­on of a prison outside Tripoli and an airport in Benghazi.

The cha rges relate to t he world’s l a r ge s t i r r i g at i on project – the Great Man Made River Project – to provide fresh water to the cities of Tripoli, Benghazi and Sirte.

The firm employs 50,000 people worldwide, and if found guilty in Canada it would be prohibited from bidding on Canadian government projects – its lifeblood.

It has argued that those responsibl­e for alleged wrongdoing left the company long ago, and that holding i t accountabl­e for their criminal actions would severely hurt its business.

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