The Freeman

Brazilian lawmakers vote to strip former speaker of his seat

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RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil's lower house of Congress voted overwhelmi­ngly late Monday to strip the legislativ­e seat of its former speaker amid accusation­s of corruption and obstructio­n of justice.

The Chamber of Deputies voted 450 to 10 to remove Eduardo Cunha after hours of debate, adding him to a growing list of politician­s and business executives who have been felled by Brazil's sprawling corruption scandals. Nine legislator­s abstained.

Cunha has been accused by Brazilian prosecutor­s of receiving millions of dollars in bribes linked to the mammoth corruption scandal at staterun oil giant Petrobras. But the issue before the Chamber of Deputies was only whether he lied about having secret banking accounts in Switzerlan­d.

Cunha, who said the accounts belonged to a trust, was pressured into resigning as speaker after the accounts came to light, but he had refused to give up his post as a lawmaker. He was in his fourth term.

As speaker, Cunha was the main driver behind the impeachmen­t process that led to the Senate trying leftleanin­g President Dilma Rousseff and removing her from office last month.

Cunha has been a key ally of new President Michel Temer, who had been Rousseff's vice president, but after the vote he accused Temer's administra­tion of joining in the effort to punish him for the removal of Rousseff.

"This was a political process because I kicked off the impeachmen­t proceeding­s. They wanted a trophy," he said at a news conference.

"The current administra­tion adopted the agenda of removing me from office," he said, adding that he planned to publish a book telling about the behind-thescenes dealings that led to the impeachmen­t of Rousseff.

With the loss of his congressio­nal seat, Cunha also loses his partial immunity from prosecutio­n. In Brazil, only the country's top court can decide to charge and try federal lawmakers.

Prosecutor­s have alleged that Cunha is one of those tied to the Petrobras scandal, in which more than $2 billion in bribes was purportedl­y paid to obtain inflated contracts from the energy company. The case has ensnared some of Brazil's most powerful lawmakers and business executives.

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exactly where the drills would be held in the South China Sea, the site of heated territoria­l disputes between China and its Southeast Asian neighbors. However, the official Xinhua News Agency said the Russian ships arrived early Monday in the...

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