Jamaica Gleaner

Ousted Venezuelan prosecutor leaks bribe video

- – AP

VENEZUELA’S OUSTED chief prosecutor leaked a video Thursday purporting to show an Odebrecht executive saying he agreed to pay US$35 million towards President Nicolás Maduro’s campaign in exchange for prioritisi­ng the Brazilian constructi­on giant’s projects.

Luisa Ortega Diaz, who fled Venezuela in August after being removed from office by a new, all-powerful constituen­t assembly, said on her website that the video shows Venezuela Odebrecht president Euzenando Prazeres de Azevedo speaking to Brazilian prosecutor­s.

In the video, a man identified as Azevedo says a Maduro aide asked for US$50 million for the socialist leader’s 2013 campaign. The special presidenti­al election was convened shortly after the death of Hugo Chávez and Maduro was running a tight race with opposition candidate Henrique Capriles.

Azevedo said he agreed to pay US$35 million in exchange for assurances that if Maduro won, Odebrecht projects would receive “priority”.

“We negotiated, I agreed to Venezuela’s ousted Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz.

pay and the resources were released,” he said.

Odebrecht acknowledg­ed in a US Justice Department plea agreement that it paid bribes throughout Latin America to secure lucrative contracts.

Maduro did not immediatel­y

remark on the claim, but Tarek William Saab, who replaced Ortega after her dismissal, said there is an order for Azevedo’s arrest. He added that Venezuelan authoritie­s will be alerting Interpol in hopes of obtaining his capture.

The same statement noted that former lawmaker German Ferrer, Ortega’s husband, is also a wanted man. The government has accused him of running a US$6 million extortion ring with corrupt prosecutor­s under Ortega’s supervisio­n.

Shortly after fleeing Venezuela, Ortega told a group of Latin American prosecutor­s she believed Maduro had ordered her removal in order to halt an ongoing probe linking him and his inner circle to nearly $100 million in bribes from Odebrecht.

A longtime government loyalist, Ortega has become one of Maduro’s fiercest critics after breaking with his government in late March. She declared that a Supreme Court ruling stripping the opposition-controlled congress of its last powers violated the constituti­on.

Ortega has repeatedly claimed that she has evidence implicatin­g Maduro and other top officials in corruption involving Odebrecht but has provided few details.

 ?? AP ??
AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica