The Borneo Post

Brazil arrests Rio 2016 Olympic committee chairman on corruption charges

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian police on Thursday arrested the chairman of the country’s Olympic Committee as part of a probe into alleged vote buying to secure Rio’s hosting of the 2016 Games.

Twenty federal police agents swept into Rio de Janeiro’s upscale Leblon neighborho­od in an early morning operation to arrest 75year- old Carlos Nuzman.

The Rio 2016 committee’s chief operating officer Leonardo Gryner was arrested in a separate raid.

A grim-faced Nuzman left his home wearing a dark business suit in the Rio heat as he was escorted by police.

The agents, who were operating on orders from a federal judge, also seized documents.

Nuzman and Gryner “wi l l be charged with the crimes of corruption, money laundering and criminal associatio­n,” police said in a statement.

Nuzman appeared relaxed and chatted with the agents as he entered the police station.

The men were sent to the Benefica prison in northern Rio, a police source told AFP.

With their detention, the vice president of Brazil’s Olympic Committee, Paulo Wanderley, has temporaril­y taken charge of the body.

The arrests are the latest in a widespread corruption scandal rocking Brazil that has ensnared many of the country’s top political and business figures, and which often has links to abroad.

It is “essential” that the suspects be detained “as a guarantee of public order” to allow their assets to be blocked, and to stop them from engaging in any criminal act or interferin­g with evidence, the Rio prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

Prosecutor­s asked for some US$ 319 million dollars in assets belonging to Nuzman and Gryner to be blocked.

Nuzman, who has headed Brazil’s Olympic Committee since 1995, saw his assets increase 457 per cent over the past decade with no clear source for the new income, prosecutor­s said.

Nuzman also tried to hide his wealth, often in foreign accounts, the statement read.

He only declared he owned 16 gold bars weighing one kilogram ( 2.2 pounds) each when he was questioned a month ago, prosecutor­s said.

Following an investigat­ion dubbed “Unfair Play” that spanned several countries, Brazilian officials last month said Nuzman was the “lynchpin” in a plot to bribe the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee into awarding Rio de Janeiro last year’s Games.

At the time, Nuzman was detained and questioned and authoritie­s confiscate­d his passport.

Investigat­ors also searched the offices of Brazil’s Olympic Committee and several companies suspected of links to the scandal.

Thursday’s operation in Rio was dubbed “Unfair Play - Second Half.”

Authoritie­s allege that former Rio governor Sergio Cabral, who is serving a 14-year prison term for bribery and money laundering, was the mastermind of the plot, which saw US$ 2 million in bribes paid to Papa Massata Diack, the son of Senegalese IOC member Lamine Diack, before the 2009 vote.

Businessma­n Arturo Soares, known as “King Arthur,” a top contractor for Cabral’s administra­tion, allegedly delivered the payment three days before the IOC vote in Copenhagen in October 2009. Rio beat bids from Chicago, Madrid and Tokyo to host the 2016 games.

Rio prosecutor­s say they have new informatio­n conclusive­ly showing how the payments were made. In their statement they cite an email from Papa Massata directly asking Nuzman for help with “the final process,” and an email discussing difficulti­es in bank transfers.

Rio 2016 was credited with being a sporting and organizati­onal success, but revelation­s of massive corruption during the preparatio­ns and now even in the awarding of the Games have tarnished the legacy.

The latest scandal cast a pall over an IOC meeting in Lima last month following the designatio­n of Paris for the 2024 Games and Los Angeles as the 2028 host city.

IOC President Thomas Bach was asked at the time about Nuzman’s role in the organizati­on as an honorary member. Bach pledged the IOC’s cooperatio­n, but noted that there are limits to any sports organizati­on’s powers of investigat­ion.

Ban Ki-moon, chief of the IOC’s ethics commission, on Thursday also pledged cooperatio­n and asked Brazilian authoritie­s to supply all the available informatio­n on the case.

“Given the new facts, the IOC Ethics Commission may consider provisiona­l measures whi le respecting Mr Nuzman’s right to be heard,” the IOC said in a statement.

The group “will not comment further on this matter until a recommenda­tion is issued by the IOC Ethics Commission,” and it “reiterates that the presumptio­n of innocence prevails.”

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Carlos Arthur Nuzman (left) leaves the Federal Police headquarte­rs heading to jail, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
— Reuters photo Carlos Arthur Nuzman (left) leaves the Federal Police headquarte­rs heading to jail, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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