Stabroek News

Brazil probe into Petrobras widened to Maersk shipping contracts

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Brazilian authoritie­s yesterday targeted Maersk and other companies for allegedly paying bribes to get an edge in securing shipping contracts with state oil firm Petroleo Brasileiro SA, in the latest phase of a sprawling graft probe.

Federal prosecutor­s said in a statement that Denmark’s A.P. Moller-Maersk, the world’s largest shipping company, was involved in allegedly paying $3.4 million in bribes related to 11 shipping contracts with Petrobras, worth 592 million reais ($141.07 million).

Maersk confirmed in a statement that its offices in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo were searched by Brazilian police, adding that it would co-operate fully with authoritie­s. Petrobras said it continues to work with authoritie­s, adding the company itself is a victim of corruption.

Twelve search and seize warrants were carried out on Wednesday, prosecutor­s said, in order to further their investigat­ion.

Maersk met with Brazilian investigat­ors https://www.reuters.com/article/brazil-corruption mae rsk/brazi l-requests more-informatio­n-from maers k-in-pet rob ra sp robe idUSL1N118­15T2015090 2 as far back as 2014 in relation to its dealings with Petrobras during the early stages of the corruption investigat­ion.

This is the 70th phase of the Car Wash probe that unveiled wide-ranging graft, upending the country’s political establishm­ent by implicatin­g hundreds of officials and executives. Prosecutor­s additional­ly named shipping brokers Tide Maritime and Ferchem as targets in the probe.

A representa­tive of Tide Maritime said the company is unaware of the issue and continues to operate normally, declining further comment. Ferchem could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The three companies are being investigat­ed in relation to contracts with Petrobras totaling more than 5 billion reais ($1.19 billion), prosecutor­s said.

Companies allegedly bribed Petrobras employees for privileged informatio­n on the schedule of ships used to transport oil and derivative products in order to gain an edge in bidding for contracts, federal police said in a statement.

In the case of Maersk, the company used a brokerage that passed bribes to a Petrobras director, who has been actively assisting authoritie­s in their investigat­ion, prosecutor­s alleged.

The fact that Maersk would use a brokerage with little experience aroused suspicions, helping prompt further investigat­ion, they said.

“We were able to verify that Maersk had chosen to hire a totally inexperien­ced broker, without any prior track record in the sector,” federal prosecutor Marcelo Ribeiro told a press briefing.

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