Kuwait Times

Temer, billionair­e accuse each other of corruption

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Embattled President Michel Temer exchanged furious denunciati­ons of corruption Saturday with a leading businessma­n who alleges Brazil’s leader was behind the bribes paid by business executives to politician­s and government authoritie­s in exchange for political favors. Meatpackin­g billionair­e Joesley Batista, who is himself under investigat­ion for fraud, claimed in an interview published in the newsmagazi­ne Epoca that “Temer leads Brazil’s largest and most dangerous criminal organizati­on.” He provided no specifics to back up his charge.

Temer’s office fired back with a statement describing Batista as “the most notorious and successful bandit in Brazil’s history” and it promised to file criminal and civil lawsuits against him. Batista is now a key witness in corruption investigat­ions that threaten to force Temer out of office before his term ends in December 2018. Prosecutor­s have said they are considerin­g charging the president with receiving bribes and with trying to obstruct the investigat­ion into a colossal corruption scheme at the state-run oil company that involved huge kickbacks to politician­s in return for inflated contracts. Dozens of politician­s and business executives already have been convicted in the Petrobras case.

A key part of the evidence against Temer comes from plea bargain agreements with prosecutor­s signed by Batista and his brother Wesley that allow the two men to remain free. Under investigat­ion in a pension fund fraud, they have said they paid kickbacks to more than 1,800 politician­s to win favors for their JBS meatpackin­g company. JBS is the world’s biggest meat processing company and operates more than 100 industrial units around the world, including in the United states.

Their revelation­s include a recording of a March meeting between Batista and Temer in which the president appears to condone the payment of hush money to imprisoned former Speaker of the House Eduardo Cunha, who is serving a 15-year corruption sentence. Prosecutor­s have said that in the recording Temer is heard authorizin­g Batista to pay Cunha the equivalent of about $150,000 a week for not reaching a plea bargain deal.

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