Jamaica Gleaner

Mexican gov’t shields officials from corruption probe

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LESS THAN two months before President Enrique Peña Nieto leaves offices his administra­tion is seeking to shield itself from a corruption investigat­ion that has the potential to sweep up federal officials.

The presidency’s legal office filed a motion with the Supreme Court seeking to protect federal officials from being targeted in a criminal process under way in northern Chihuahua state over public funds purportedl­y diverted to a campaign of the governing Institutio­nal Revolution­ary Party, or PRI for its initials in Spanish.

It is the first publicly known case in which the president’s legal office has sought to protect him and his officials in a corruption investigat­ion.

The Supreme Court received the filing on October 11, but it was not made public until the newspaper Reforma published its contents Wednesday. The legal document is public.

Last December, authoritie­s detained Alejandro Gutierrez, a former high-ranking PRI official, for alleged participat­ion in a plan to siphon off the equivalent of US$12 million in Chihuahua state public funds for political campaigns.

The money was allegedly diverted in 2016, and state authoritie­s are searching for former PRI Governor Cesar Duarte, who is currently a fugitive. Gutierrez was acquitted in the case and freed last month.

Javier Corral, Chihuahua’s current governor from the opposition National Action Party, has been a staunch critic of federal action in the case. In an interview after Gutierrez’s exoneratio­n was announced, he called the entire process a “pretence.”

“Corruption was not encapsulat­ed in the states,” he said, but rather “rose to the federal level, touched officials from the government of Peña Nieto and Peña Nieto himself, and for that reason they have resorted to these acts of cynicism”.

Against that backdrop, the presidency’s legal office this month filed the motion against Corral and judicial authoritie­s of Chihuahua, seeking to block any “existing or imminent” legal actions against “current or prior federal public officials,” either “directly or indirectly (related) to the exercise of their duties”.

While it is common in Mexico for public officials who fear an investigat­ion to appeal to courts against future legal action, there is no precedent for it being done by the presidency to the high court.

Cases of alleged corruption have dogged Peña Nieto’s government, and at least three PRI ex-governors are under arrest. Analysts consider it one of the main reasons his party lost the presidenti­al election in July.

 ??  ?? President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto.
President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto.

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