Stabroek News

Driver’s diaries of transporti­ng bags of cash help Argentina score historic victory against corruption

- By Andrés Oppenheime­r

Argentina’s biggest victory against corruption in recent memory could have an impact across Latin America. But to make a permanent dent on this problem, countries will have to take much more drastic actions — such as eliminatin­g cash.

To be sure, the “notebooks” scandal that rocked Argentina this week and the country’s unrelated sentencing of former vice president Amado Boudou to almost six years in prison for bribery during the 2007-2015 government of President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner are historic events. In Argentina, few powerful people have ever gone to prison.

Much like Brazil’s recent Odebrecht scandal, which tainted many key politician­s and business people, Argentina’s “notebooks” scandal is massive.

It started earlier this year, when Argentina’s daily La Nación got copies of eight handrwitte­n notebooks with journals of the driver of a senior government official who was in charge of ties with constructi­on companies during the Kirchner government. Top of Form Bottom of Form The driver had meticulous­ly written down the details of his boss’s daily activities, including numerous trips to pick up bags full of cash from companies that were awarded government contracts.

Between 2005 and 2015, the bags full of bribe money that the driver transporte­d and logged into his notebooks totaled between $60 million and $160 million, prosecutor­s say.

The driver, Oscar Centeno, not only specified the names of the companies where he picked up the bags of cash, and the executives who delivered them, he also detailed where he had taken the money. According to his diaries, he made at least 70 deliveries to the apartment of late president Nestor Kirchner and his wife, Cristina, who was president during most of that period.

The newspaper didn’t publish the contents of these notebooks immediatel­y, but turned them over to a judge in order to corroborat­e the facts and allow the courts to investigat­e the case. Now, it’s all out, and more than a dozen people — including leading business executives — have been arrested.

At least four executives have already admitted making the payments, and a judge has requested that former president Cristina Fernandez be stripped of her congressio­nal immunity as senator so that he can order a raid into her home. As protected witnesses start to testify, the notebooks are expected to result in even more arrests.

While it has long been common knowledge that the Kirchner government­s were corrupt, this is the first time that is have been documented and exposed in such detail. Many Argentines hope that this will be a turning point in the country’s history and that Argentina’s tolerance for corruption has reached its limit.

But for this victory against corruption to last, Argentina and other Latin American countries will have to start using new technologi­es to gradually eliminate cash, eventually becoming cashless societies, much like northern European countries are doing.

In Sweden, bills and coins now amount to only 2 percent of all money transactio­ns, as more people are using debit cards, e-money transfers and their cellular phones to make payments. There’s so little cash in Sweden, that some beggars on the streets now use cellphone apps to accept money.

What’s more, most major bank branches in Sweden no longer accept cash deposits, because their amounts are too small to justify the cost of guards or security services. The Danish Bankers Associatio­n says banks have witnessed a big fall in the number of robberies over the past five years: they hold so little cash, that potential robbers fear leaving empty-handed.

Granted, moving toward a cashless society is much more difficult in Latin America, where there is a huge undergroun­d economy, and many poor people are still not connected to the internet.

But Latin American government­s should promote electronic transfers and telephone payments, as well as prohibit growing numbers of cash transactio­ns, in order to permanentl­y reduce their endemic bribery problems.

Without cash, the Kirchners would have had a much tougher time collecting kickbacks. Of course, it’s not the only solution, but reducing cash would be a major step to help win the war on corruption.

 ?? (PNCR photo) ?? Unity show: Arms upraised, new chairman of the PNCR, Volda Lawrence is flanked by the other two contenders for the post, Basil Williams (right) and Joseph Harmon. In results declared just after midnight yesterday, Lawrence received 346 votes while Harmon secured 287 votes and Williams, 183. In a statement yesterday, the PNCR said that 82 persons contested for positions on the 15-member Central Executive Committee and these results will be announced later. The PNCR statement said that the three-day congress saw over 1000 delegates accredited and 413 observers representi­ng 264 groups.
(PNCR photo) Unity show: Arms upraised, new chairman of the PNCR, Volda Lawrence is flanked by the other two contenders for the post, Basil Williams (right) and Joseph Harmon. In results declared just after midnight yesterday, Lawrence received 346 votes while Harmon secured 287 votes and Williams, 183. In a statement yesterday, the PNCR said that 82 persons contested for positions on the 15-member Central Executive Committee and these results will be announced later. The PNCR statement said that the three-day congress saw over 1000 delegates accredited and 413 observers representi­ng 264 groups.
 ??  ?? Cristina Kirchner
Cristina Kirchner
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana