The Borneo Post

Brazil police say Rio Olympics were bought in corrupt scheme

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian officials said Tuesday that the country’s Olympics chief was the “lynchpin” in a plot to bribe the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee into awarding Rio de Janeiro last year’s Games.

Brazilian police said in a statement they were probing “an internatio­nal corruption scheme” aimed at “the buying of votes for the election of ( Rio) by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee as the venue for the 2016 Olympics.”

Reveal ing a nine- month investigat­ion spanning several countries and dubbed “Unfair Play,” police said Carlos Nuzman had been taken in for questionin­g and his house searched.

Nuzman, who was the pointman for Rio’s successful bid to become the fi rst South American host of the Olympics, left his house in Rio’s posh Leblon neighborho­od while police officers exited with bags of evidence.

Prosecutor­s said Nuzman was detained to give testimony and although not arrested he had his passport confi scated.

An arrest warrant was issued for Arthur Soares, a businessma­n who won lucrative pre- Olympics contracts from Rio’s government when it was headed by the now imprisoned state governor Sergio Cabral. He lives in Miami.

A former Soares associate, Eliane Pereira Cavalcante, was arrested in Rio and 11 properties were subjected to search and seizure raids. One of them was in Paris, French authoritie­s said.

In Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, an IOC spokesman appeared to have

The IOC has learned about these circumstan­ces from the media and is making every effort to get the full informatio­n. Spokesman

been taken by surprise.

“The IOC has learned about these circumstan­ces from the media and is making every effort to get the full informatio­n,” the spokesman said.

“It is in the highest interests of the IOC to get clarificat­ion on this matter.”

Brazilian investigat­ors have worked closely with a similar French probe into the vote buying and French officials, including well-known anti-corruption Judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke, attended the raid on Nuzman’s home.

The United States and other countries have also been involved as officials tracked down alleged bribe payments made in offshore bank account s , Brazi l i an prosecutor­s said.

Prosecutor Fabiana Schneider told a press conference that Soares, known in Brazil as “King Arthur,” allegedly bribed the son of Senegalese IOC member Lamine Diack before the 2009 vote in which Rio beat Chicago, Madrid and Tokyo to win the 2016 Games.

Diack, who was head of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s ( IAAF) at the time, had considerab­le influence over African votes on the IOC.

Nuzman, Schneider said, had been the “lynchpin” between Soares and the son, Papa Massata Diack.

“In this context and putting all the elements together, we can come to the conclusion that Sergio Cabral and his criminal organizati­on, including Arthur Soares, effectivel­y bought the vote for Rio de Janeiro to host the Olympic Games,” she said.

The Rio games were generally credited with being a sporting and organizati­onal success, but revelation­s of massive corruption during the preparatio­ns and now even in the naming of the host city have tarnished the legacy.

In June, Cabral was sentenced to 14 years in prison. He was convicted of bribery and money laundering, including participat­ion in the embezzleme­nt of 220 mil lion reais ( US$ 64 million) from public works projects such as Rio’s iconic Maracana football stadium.

Schneider said the Games had been used as a “trampoline” for corruption.

A lawyer for Nuzman, Sergio Mazzillo, said his client was “calm.”

He told journalist­s that Nuzman “says he did not act in an irregular way, that he did nothing wrong during the campaign.”

The scandal comes as Brazilian law enforcemen­t pursues the country’s biggest ever anticorrup­tion fightin aprobeknow­nas “Car Wash,” which has uncovered a huge web of embezzleme­nt and bribery at top levels of politics and business. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Nuzman (centre) arrives to Federal Police headquarte­rs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — Reuters photo
Nuzman (centre) arrives to Federal Police headquarte­rs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — Reuters photo

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