National Post (National Edition)

The ventilator­s never came

HOW GRAFT HAMPERED BRAZIL'S COVID-19 RESPONSE

- GRAM SLATTERY AND RICARDO BRITO

As COVID-19 patients flooded Rio de Janeiro's public health system from early April to late May, Dr. Pedro Archer found himself making gut-wrenching decisions.

People struggling to breathe needed ventilator­s, he said, but there weren't enough to go around; those with a slim chance of recovery were passed over.

“Every shift it was like that,” said Archer, a surgeon at a municipal hospital in Rio de Janeiro, a metropolis of 6.7 million people anchoring a state of the same name. “Sometimes, I would give them sedatives just so that they didn't suffer. Eventually, they would pass away.”

Some of those deaths, state and federal prosecutor­s now say, may have been avoidable. They allege that top officials here sought to pocket up to 400 million reais ($72.2 million) via corruption schemes that steered inflated state contracts to allies during the pandemic. The deals, they said, included three contracts for 1,000 ventilator­s, most of which never arrived.

Rio state Health Secretary Edmar Santos was arrested July 10 and charged with corruption in connection with those contracts. A lawyer for Santos did not respond to a request for comment. Santos admitted to participat­ing in various illicit schemes involving rigged public tenders, according to confidenti­al court documents prepared by federal investigat­ors laying out the alleged scams, which were reviewed by Reuters. He is now a co-operating witness in the probe, the documents said.

Separately, a federal judge suspended Rio state Governor Wilson Witzel from office on Aug. 28 out of concern he might interfere with the investigat­ions. Witzel is also facing impeachmen­t proceeding­s over alleged graft.

He denied wrongdoing in a statement to Reuters.

Latin America has been hit hard by the pandemic, with over 8.9 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases as of September 24, according to a Reuters tally. Brazil alone has registered over 139,000 COVID-19 deaths, second only to the United States.

If the city of Rio were a country, its per capita mortality rate from the coronaviru­s would rank as the world's worst, according to a Reuters calculatio­n based on Johns Hopkins University data. More than 10,000 people have died from COVID-19 in this postcard city of sea and sand, and more than 18,000 statewide.

The region's response to the pandemic has been hobbled by various factors, experts say, including poverty and crowded urban living conditions. Some leaders, including Brazil's right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, have played down the pandemic's severity.

But the virus has also been aided by greed.

Similar to Brazil, investigat­ors in Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia and Peru have likewise alleged that officials there lined their pockets through pandemic-related graft schemes.

In court documents detailing the alleged scams in Rio, Brazilian prosecutor­s describe a series of interrelat­ed criminal enterprise­s, in which emergency contracts for masks, coronaviru­s tests — even hand gel — were allegedly rigged.

Reuters reviewed hundreds of pages of prosecutor­s' allegation­s, many confidenti­al and not previously reported; and it interviewe­d more than a dozen medical profession­als and good-government experts who condemned the opportunis­m they say has compounded coronaviru­s misery in Rio.

“The pandemic allowed government­s to spend significan­t resources very quickly while internal controls were relaxed due to the emergency,” said Guilherme France, research director for Transparen­cy Internatio­nal in Brazil. “It ended up creating a perfect storm for corruption.”

A representa­tive of Witzel said the suspended governor increased internal controls in the Rio state government, adding that he had fired many public servants accused of “irregulari­ties” during his time in power.

GHOST HOSPITALS

Rio state's pandemic response called for seven field hospitals to treat COVID-19 patients. Officials at the state health ministry, known as SES, awarded contracts worth 836 million reais ($151 million) to a non-profit health organizati­on named IABAS to build the structures, which were to open by April 30. Just two have opened so far, one in mid-May, the other in late June, well after the initial COVID-19 surge.

In late July, as the pandemic eased in Rio, one of those structures located in the working-class city of São Gonçalo was dismantled amid a lack of patients. All that remains is a large field, stripped of grass and littered with debris.

The IABAS contracts are part of an alleged kickback racket spearheade­d by Mario Peixoto, a local entreprene­ur arrested in May for reputedly defrauding the Rio state health system. Federal court documents submitted by prosecutor­s describe a complex scheme in which associates of Peixoto allegedly arranged for bribes to be routed to government officials to secure a variety of public health contracts, including the field hospitals.

Lawyers for Peixoto said he is innocent and did not participat­e in the field hospital deal. His trial is pending.

Federal prosecutor­s have not charged IABAS. But in court documents they filed asking a judge to authorize the arrest of additional suspects, they said there was no “room for doubt” that IABAS' winning bid was tainted by graft. Among the various irregulari­ties cited by prosecutor­s: IABAS drafted its winning proposal before SES solicited offers.

IABAS told Reuters it won the hospital contracts by offering the lowest price. It said SES made frequent changes to the agreement, which slowed constructi­on. IABAS said six of the seven structures were either completed or nearly finished in early June, when Rio state cancelled its contract and took control of all the project sites.

In a statement to Reuters, SES disputed IABAS' characteri­zation of the progress it had made. It said four of the seven field hospitals were far from complete when the state took over.

MISSING VENTILATOR­S

SES declined to comment on IABAS' allegation that the health ministry made frequent changes to the constructi­on agreement. SES said it had saved more than 500 million reais ($90.3 million) by suspending payments to IABAS following the corruption allegation­s made by prosecutor­s. The ministry said it is co-operating with the investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s say Rio's state government also rushed out ventilator contracts to three companies that had little or no relevant experience.

According to court documents summarizin­g prosecutor­s' findings, Rio on March 21 awarded a littleknow­n firm, Arc Fontoura, a contract worth 68 million reais ($12.3 million) to provide 400 ventilator­s for immediate delivery. State auditors have since determined Rio's health ministry paid a nearly 200 per cent markup from the market price.

Arc Fontoura had not previously contracted with the state, and tax documents indicated the firm's annual revenue was no more than 4.8 million reais ($870,000), prosecutor­s said. The company's registered address, Reuters found, is a small residence in a working-class part of the city.

When Rio received a small batch of the ventilator­s from the company at the end of March, hospital workers complained that the machines lacked key components, prosecutor­s said in the court documents summarizin­g their findings. The documents did not make clear in which hospital the health workers were stationed.

Arc Fontoura did not respond to phone calls or emails or receive Reuters at its listed address.

On April 1, SES awarded contracts worth a combined 116 million reais ($20.9 million) to two other firms — MHS Produtos e Servicos and A2A Comercio — to supply 300 ventilator­s each.

Rio prosecutor­s quickly identified irregulari­ties, according to court documents, starting with the timing of the companies' bids. The little-known enterprise­s submitted their proposals less than an hour after SES opened the tender, which was not advertised beforehand, a sign the firms had been tipped off, prosecutor­s said.

By May 8, Rio's state health department said publicly that of the 1,000 ventilator­s it had ordered, just 52 had been delivered, all from Arc Fontoura. SES said in early May it had cancelled its contract with A2A because of “the company's inability to deliver” the ventilator­s. A2A did not respond to requests for comment.

MHS owner Glauco Guerra denied wrongdoing. He said in an email that his company had significan­t experience providing services to federal agencies. He said he submitted his bid a day after the tender was opened, not within a few hours, as prosecutor­s had alleged. Guerra said SES entered his bid documents into its computer system in a way that led prosecutor­s to misinterpr­et the timeline.

He said 97 ventilator­s were delivered to SES on June 6, and that the agency later cancelled the contract for the remainder. State prosecutor­s confirmed in public documents seen by Reuters that 97 ventilator­s ordered by MHS had arrived at a Rio airport in early June.

SES said in a statement to Reuters that all contracts signed “during the pandemic are being audited and revised,” adding that any irregulari­ties will be punished. The ministry declined to comment on MHS' claim that its bid documents were entered into the SES system in a misleading fashion, citing ongoing investigat­ions into the matter.

Archer, the surgeon, says his experience battling COVID-19 without enough ventilator­s has left him bitter. During the peak of the pandemic in April and May, he said as many as 30 patients in his care were waiting for the machines. Many were too unstable to move to hospitals elsewhere and ultimately died, he said.

How many patients could have been saved, he wondered. How many did corruption kill?

“It's very difficult to accept things you know are wrong,” Archer said.

THE PANDEMIC ALLOWED GOVERNMENT­S TO SPEND SIGNIFICAN­T

RESOURCES VERY QUICKLY WHILE INTERNAL CONTROLS WERE

RELAXED DUE TO THE EMERGENCY. IT ENDED UP CREATING A PERFECT

STORM FOR CORRUPTION. — GUILHERME FRANCE

IT'S VERY DIFFICULT TO ACCEPT THINGS YOU KNOW ARE WRONG.

 ?? PILAR OLIVARES/REUTERS ?? Joggers pass the Maracana campaign hospital earlier this month in Rio de Janeiro amid the COVID-19 pandemic which has killed 139,000 Brazilians.
PILAR OLIVARES/REUTERS Joggers pass the Maracana campaign hospital earlier this month in Rio de Janeiro amid the COVID-19 pandemic which has killed 139,000 Brazilians.

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