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Venezuela Prosecutor Threatens 2 with Charges in Bribery Scheme


Commuters drive past the construction site by Odebrecht of the Caracas, the Guatire metro rail project in Guatire, Venezuela, March 28, 2017. Odebrecht left at least 23 multi-million dollar projects unfinished or stalled in Venezuela.
Commuters drive past the construction site by Odebrecht of the Caracas, the Guatire metro rail project in Guatire, Venezuela, March 28, 2017. Odebrecht left at least 23 multi-million dollar projects unfinished or stalled in Venezuela.

Venezuela’s state prosecutor’s office said Wednesday it would charge two people linked to a former transportation minister for involvement in bribery schemes associated with the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht SA.

Maria Baptista and Elita Zacarias “are linked to the ex-Minister Haiman El Troudi and must appear July 27,” the state prosecutor’s office said via Twitter, without providing further details.

El Troudi later said that his relatives, whom local media have reported are his wife and mother-in-law, had nothing to do with the case.

“To get to me, Mrs. Prosecutor, my immunity is no obstacle and my family shouldn’t be the way forward,” he tweeted. “As this case is chiefly political, know that I will be the one to present myself to the prosecutor’s office, with my conscience clear and my head high.”

Reuters was unable to obtain comments from Baptista and Zacarias.

FILE - A man walks past the corporate logo of Odebrecht in a construction site in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 26, 2017.
FILE - A man walks past the corporate logo of Odebrecht in a construction site in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 26, 2017.

Odebrecht bribes

Odebrecht, the largest engineering and construction company in Latin America, acknowledged in 2016 that it paid about $98 million in bribes over several years to obtain contracts in Venezuela.

Earlier this year, the prosecutors sought the arrest of Odebrecht Venezuela chief Euzenando Azevedo, but he has not been captured and is presumed to have left the country.

President Nicolas Maduro has publicly said that those responsible for the embezzlement must be punished.

But the investigation has moved particularly slowly through the justice system, in contrast to other countries in the region where similar bribery took place.

FILE - Venezuela's Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega gives a press conference in Caracas, Venezuela, July 4, 2017.
FILE - Venezuela's Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega gives a press conference in Caracas, Venezuela, July 4, 2017.

Major projects stalled

Odebrecht has left at least 23 multi-million dollar projects unfinished or stalled in Venezuela, according to company and government documents, interviews with more than two dozen workers, and site visits.

Still, a political showdown between the government and the prosecutor might be hastening investigations.

Prosecutor Luisa Ortega is clashing with the leftist government, and her office appears to have sped up accusations of high-profile Socialist Party officials, security officials, and oil executives in the last month.

But the pro-government Supreme Court later Wednesday issued a decision curtailing the prosecutor’s powers to indict people. Ortega has also said she expects to be fired after accusing Maduro’s government of human rights violations and erosion of democracy.

She has said she would resist such a move.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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