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Brazil Sports minister: next victim of the corruption-exposure campaign?

Monday, October 17th 2011 - 06:59 UTC
Full article 5 comments
Orlando Silva and his predecessor both belong to the Communist party Orlando Silva and his predecessor both belong to the Communist party

Brazil’s largest circulation magazine Veja, claimed in its last edition that the Sports Minister Orlando Silva has been involved in corruption actions totalling millions of dollars originally destined to promote sports among children from poor households.

Allegedly the program ‘Second Half’ in the last eight years could have been involved in the deviation of almost the equivalent of 23 million dollars and could include in the scam Orlando Silva’s predecessor in the job, Agnelo Queiroz, currently governor of Brasilia Federal District.

The magazine famous for exposing corruption cases that have knocked out several ministers from the cabinet of President Dilma Rousseff says the source of information is a policeman, Joao Dias Ferrerira, together with Minister Silva, both members of the Communist Party of Brazil, who has been in jail since last year for having pocketed money from a non government organization which received monthly instalments from the Sports Ministry.

According to Ferreira the NGO received funds from the Second Half program but previously they had to agree on a percentage-skim sometimes up to 20% with the Ministry of Sports. The Communist Party would indicate members who would supply the false bills to make the operation ‘legal’.

The messenger and ‘percentage’ collector Celio Soares Pereira would receive the ‘skim’ from the NGO regularly (almost monthly) and would deliver the money to aides close to the minister. On one occasion according to Pereira, he handed the money directly to Orlando Silva in the parking lot of the Sports ministry.

“I collected the money from Federal District NGO representatives that received funds from the ‘Second Half’ program and I delivered it in a card box to the minister. They were all 50 and 100 Real bills (equivalent to 28 and 57 dollars)”, said the messenger to Veja.

However Minister Silva sent a letter to Veja, which was published in the magazine, denying all allegations which he describes as “false, senseless, fabricated and irrational”, and at the same time announces he would begin legal actions against the ‘slanders’.

Since President Roursseff took office last January first, her cabinet has lost five ministers, four of them because of corruption claims published in the press. So far a cabinet chief, Transport, Tourism and Agriculture have had to step down, while the head of Defence went down following public derogatory remarks towards some of his colleagues.
 

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

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  • GeoffWard2

    THIS is Lula's true legacy to Brasil.

    He is infamous for his complete
    *institutionalisation of corruption* to all areas of the government and the administration, both federal and throughout all states of the nation.

    This means -

    No function of government or its civil, military, judicial or any other facet of operation of the state can take place without a series of corrupt acts.

    No dealing of the government with industry, commerce or the professions can take place without a series of corrupt acts.

    No interactions between Brasil and any other nation - and especially Trade - can take place without a series of corrupt acts.

    No operation of any ONG (NGO) involving Brasil can take place without a series of corrupt acts.

    No financial business - and especially the redistribution of taxation incomes - can take place without a series of corrupt acts.

    THIS is what Lula and PT, the Workers Party, have done to Brasil.

    My fear is that EVERY politician and government employee has, perforce, become a participant in the system and its corruption.

    When corruption is institutionalised, there is no escape from it.

    Rue the day that the Brasil's voters allowed Brasil's judiciary to become politicised and corrupt - allowing corrupting laws and the prctice of corruption to continue with impunity.
    Brasil's ruling classes are now largely beyond and above the law;
    and Brasil's voting classes allowed it to happen.

    THIS is Lula's true legacy.

    Oct 17th, 2011 - 11:32 am 0
  • GeneWhitmer

    Is he the victim? :-)

    Oct 17th, 2011 - 07:01 pm 0
  • GeoffWard2

    No, Lula is no victim, he remains the most powerful fixer in Brasilian politics.

    Though I cannot yet substantiate it yet, I heard today that he has become 'the largest' cattle stock owner in Brasil (though I doubt that the stock is credited for tax purposes to the name Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva).
    This would not surprise me as there has to be an outlet for fortunes 'earned' and, whilst Lula always declared no knowledge of corrupt practices in Brasil, he has certainly not demured from the accumulating benefits from his position(s).
    It would be entirely in keeping with the North Eastern origins of the man for this 'son of the soil' to deploy his fortunes in this fashion.

    This is my first foray into denegratory speculation, and I may be spectacularly wrong, but my 'once-close-to-Lula' source appears to have credibility.

    Oct 17th, 2011 - 09:59 pm 0
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