Oman Daily Observer

Billion-dollar Odebrecht scandal engulfs LatAm

- TUPAC POINTU

For years, Brazilian constructi­on giant Odebrecht landed huge public works contracts by paying hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes. Now, the company’s dirty dealings have caught up with it — and the fallout is spreading across Latin America, where the scandal has left a trail of abandoned megaprojec­ts, high-profile probes and outraged citizens in its wake.

In December, Odebrecht agreed with the US Justice Department to pay a world record $3.5-billion fine after admitting it paid $788 million in bribes to win fat constructi­on contracts in 12 countries.

The biggest payouts were for contracts with Brazil’s state oil company, Petrobras — the focus of a massive pay-to-play scandal that has upended Brazilian politics, landing a laundry list of powerful people in jail, including Odebrecht’s boss, Marcelo Odebrecht.

But the company’s reach spans far beyond Brazil — and now, so does the scandal.

Odebrecht, the biggest constructi­on firm in Latin America, paid bribes in nine other countries across the region — Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Venezuela, Cuba, Panama, Honduras, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic — as well as Angola and Mozambique in Africa.

Most of those countries have now opened investigat­ions of their own, asking Brazilian prosecutor­s to share informatio­n on dirty deals in their jurisdicti­ons.

Billions of dollars’ worth of infrastruc­ture projects are meanwhile paralysed.

After the scandal broke, the Brazilian Developmen­t Bank (BNDES) — which funded many of Odebrecht’s internatio­nal ventures — froze $3.6 billion for 16 projects across Latin America. In Venezuela, six mega-projects being built by Odebrecht have ground to a halt, including an expansion of the Caracas subway.

In the Dominican Republic, which received $2.5 billion from BNDES, unfinished roadworks and a thermoelec­tric power plant are now in doubt.

In Peru, where Odebrecht says it paid $29 million in bribes from 2005 to 2014, the government sacked the company from a $7-billion gas pipeline project that is less than one-third complete.

That and other aborted Odebrecht projects will likely shave 0.5 to one per centage point off Peru’s economic growth this year, the economy minister said last month.

HEADS TO ROLL : Investigat­ors across Latin America now have some heavy-hitting politician­s in their sights.

In Peru, a congressio­nal commission has summoned President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski to testify, along with former presidents Alejandro Toledo and Ollanta Humala, plus Humala’s powerful wife, Nadine Heredia.

In Panama, ex-president Ricardo Martinelli’s son and brother are under investigat­ion.

Likewise Argentina’s intelligen­ce chief, Gustavo Arribas, who is close to President Mauricio Macri.

In Colombia, a former deputy transport minister and ex-senator have been arrested.

The Venezuelan National Assembly, where leftist President Nicolas Maduro’s opponents hold a majority, has launched a probe into the $98 million in bribes that Odebrecht admitted to paying there — the biggest payoff outside Brazil.

And Mozambican prosecutor­s investigat­ing who received $900,000 bribes to green-light an airport for northern city of Nacala.

State news agency AIM condemned the project, completed in 2014, as an “embarrassi­ng flop,” an “internatio­nal airport with no internatio­nal flights.”

More explosive revelation­s are likely on the way: Marcelo Odebrecht and 76 other current and former executives have signed tell-all plea deals with Brazilian prosecutor­s in exchange for lighter sentences.

Corruption-weary Latin Americans are meanwhile taking to the streets. are in the

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