Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Shawwal 15, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
27°C / 27°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Scam brings down titans of business in Argentina

minus
plus

Daniel Merolla -


Records kept in notebooks of the kinds used by schoolchildren are bringing down titans of Argentina’s industry in a multimillion-dollar corruption scandal.


Dirty dealings are nothing new in Argentina.


What sets this case apart is the large number of people going down —around 20 so far, with additional names surfacing regularly — and their high-flying status in the business world.


The scandal involves under-the-table payments to the governments of Nestor and Cristina Kirchner, the Peronist couple who ruled before the current president, Mauricio Macri.


One big mystery is whether the money went to enrich government officials personally or helped finance election campaigns.


Investigative Magistrate Claudio Bonadio is raising eyebrows by ordering the arrest and questioning of so many business leaders, from both ends of the political spectrum in Argentina.


“It is not the first time that major businessmen have gone to jail. What is new is the number and the reason,” said Sergio Morresi, a political scientist at San Martin National University.


Prosecutor Carlos Stornelli has said bribes paid in the so called “corruption copybooks” case total $160 million.


Bonadio began jailing tycoons after the publication of the records by Oscar Centeno, who worked as a driver for the deputy planning and public works minister Roberto Baratta.


In these notebooks, Centeno meticulously recorded the alleged receipt of sacks of money from 2005 to 2015.


The whistleblower had been expelled from the army for bad behaviour.


“There is no doubt that the copybooks describe in detail the way in which the Kirchners raised money illegally for seven years without any alarm going off at any oversight agency,” said Nicolas Solari of the consultancy Poliarquia.


So far, eight business leaders have confessed and struck plea-bargain deals. Angelo Calcaterra, a cousin of Macri, acknowledged having ordered the payment of cash requested as a bribe in order to receive government contracts. Alberto Fernandez, who served as chief of staff to the late Nestor Kirchner, has complained that only business leaders who supported the Kirchners and their leftist Peronist governments have ended up behind bars — not those close to the current, conservative Macri government. A dozen or so people from the planning and public works ministry have gone before the judge — though they have not yet been charged over the case — and Cristina Kirchner’s turn comes on Monday. She now holds a seat as a senator. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon