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Brazil prosecutor aims graft probe at dozens of politician­s

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BRASILIA, (Reuters) - Brazil’s top public prosecutor asked the Supreme Court to open 83 new investigat­ions into senior politician­s yesterday, reportedly including five ministers and leading lawmakers, in a dramatic escalation of a graft probe threatenin­g the government.

Prosecutor General Rodrigo Janot also requested that the Court send 211 other requests to lower courts based on much-anticipate­d testimony by dozens of executives of engineerin­g group Odebrecht SA in Brazil’s biggest-ever corruption scandal.

Brazilian newspapers reported that Janot called for an investigat­ion of five members of President Michel Temer’s cabinet, along with his most senior allies in Congress, raising concerns about the stability of his administra­tion and the fate of fiscal reforms cheered by investors.

Temer said last month that he would suspend any cabinet member who is placed under investigat­ion and would dismiss them only if they are indicted for corruption.

Under Brazilian law, cabinet ministers, federal senators and lower house lawmakers can be tried only in the Supreme Court, where cases often take years to come to trial.

Janot could not disclose the names of the politician­s and others covered by his request as the Odebrecht testimony and related investigat­ions are still under seal. He asked Supreme Court Justice Edson Fachin to lift the judicial secrecy on the case for the sake of transparen­cy and the public interest.

In a letter to explain the operation, Janot said his actions on Tuesday will remind Brazilians “of the sad reality of a democracy under attack by the corruption and the abuse of political and economical powers.”

President Temer himself has not been directly implicated in illicit party funding and has denied any wrongdoing in the sprawling threeyear corruption scandal centered on overpriced contacts at state-run oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA .

Dozens of politician­s reportedly named for taking kickbacks in the testimony by Odebrecht executives included senators in Temer’s Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PDMB) and the allied Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB), which led the impeachmen­t of leftist Dilma Rousseff last year.

Janot called for lower courts to investigat­e Rousseff and her predecesso­r and political mentor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, according to newspapers O Globo, O Estado de S.Paulo and Folha de S.Paulo. Both former presidents have repeatedly denied any involvemen­t or knowledge of alleged corruption.

The new investigat­ions will be a test for Temer as he strives to pull Latin America’s largest nation out of its worst recession in more than a century.

Temer succeeded Rousseff in May, vowing to eliminate corruption and restore fiscal discipline, but he has already lost several ministers to bribery allegation­s.

His chief of staff, Eliseu Padilha, a key organizer of political support in Congress for a crucial reform of Brazil’s costly pension system, is on thin ice after an Odebrecht executive was reported to have said he asked for a cash donation for Temer’s 2014 campaign.

Newspapers Globo, Folha and Estado reported that Padilha and four other members of Temer’s cabinet were on Janot’s list: Foreign Minister Aloysio Nunes, Science Minister Gilberto Kassab, Cities Minister Bruno Araújo and Wellington Moreira Franco, the head of Temer’s high-profile infrastruc­ture privatizat­ion program.

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