Brazil leader sees red following aide’s arrest
RIO DE JANEIRO: Embattled President Michel Temer’s attempt to win back confidence and stay in power was undermined as one aide was arrested in a fraud scheme, another aide turned over to police a bag full of cash and shouts of “down with Temer” led a Senate commission to suspend work on a package of the president’s labour reforms.
Tadeu Filippelli, who had an office neighbouring Temer’s in the presidential palace, was arrested over a fraud investigation into renovations of the Brasilia soccer stadium for the 2014 World Cup.
Brazil’s federal police said the construction works were overpriced by over US$260mil (RM2.2bil).
Hours after the arrest, Temer fired Filippelli.
In the same operation, two former governors of Brazil’s Federal District, which includes capital Brasilia, were also arrested: Jose Roberto Arruda and Agnelo Queiroz.
Filippelli heads the Brasilia branch of Temer’s Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, was vicegovernor of the Federal District under Queiroz and is one of the five special aides to the president.
Four of those aides have now been linked to corruption scandals. Only two remain in their positions.
Brazil’s top court has opened investigations into Temer for alleged obstruction of justice and involvement in passive corruption. He has maintained his innocence and rejected calls to resign.
Meanwhile, another Temer aide, Rodrigo Rocha Loures, surrendered a bag filled with part of the US$150,000 (RM644,000) in alleged hush money meant for former House Speaker Eduardo Cunha, federal police said.
Brazil’s top prosecutor said last week that Loures was suspected of serving as the president’s courier in sending funds to Cunha.
Prosecutors had already released a video showing Loures running out of a Sao Paulo restaurant carrying the bag. In a recorded conversation with an executive of the JBS meatpacking company, he had identified himself as Temer’s middleman.
Temer has denied any wrongdoing and says the audiotape that appeared to show him endorsing such a bribe was faked.
Despite the wave of bad news for Brazil’s president and growing pressure for him to resign, Finance Minister Henrique Meirelles said in a meeting with investors in Sao Paulo that the political crisis would not stall the agenda for more austerity measures and unpopular reforms in the pension system and in labour laws. — AP