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Peruvian President announces resignation before impeachment vote

Peruvian President announces resignation before impeachment vote

Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

Lima : Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski has submitted his letter of resignation ahead of a scheduled impeachment him.

In a nationally televised address on Wednesday, Kuczynski said he was unable to govern effectively due to the persistent allegations of corruption that have dogged him since his first months in office, reports Xinhua news agency.

“Faced with this difficult situation that unfairly makes me appear guilty of actions in which I did not take part, I think it is best for the country that I resign as president of the republic,” said Kuczynski.

“I do not want to be an obstacle to the unity and harmony the nation needs so badly,” he said, adding his resignation ensures “an orderly constitutional transition.”

His resignation follows widely circulated videos of the President’s political allies appearing to be buying the votes of lawmakers in the lead-up to Thursday’s congressional impeachment hearing.

The businessman-turned-politician took office in July 2016, but was soon engulfed by accusations that he profited from a multinational bribery scheme operated by Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht to win lucrative government public work contracts back in the early 2000s.

The Congress first held an impeachment vote in December 2017, but the opposition-backed initiative failed to garner sufficient votes.

The initiative alleged that Kuczynski’s Florida-based company Westfield Capital provided consulting services to Odebrecht while he was minister of economy and finance, and chief of staff, during the administration of former President Alejandro Toledo.

Peru has requested Toledo’s extradition so he can stand trial for allegedly accepting millions in bribes from Odebrecht.

—IANS

Peru president, opposition leader questioned in corruption case

Peru president, opposition leader questioned in corruption case

Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

Pedro Pablo Kuczynski

Lima : Preu President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and his main rival, Keiko Fujimori, have been questioned by prosecutors investigating the corruption scandal that has dominated Peruvian politics in 2017.

While prosecutors met Kuczynski at the presidential palace, Fujimori — the daughter of disgraced former President Alberto Fujimori — reported to the Attorney General’s Office for her interrogation on Thursday, Efe news reported.

Their cases are not directly linked, but both have to do with the activities in Peru of Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht, which has acknowledged paying $788 million in bribes to obtain government contracts in a dozen countries.

Kuczynski, accompanied by his attorney, spent four hours answering questions about payments from Odebrecht to his financial-consulting business.

The firm, Westfield Capital Ltd., received more than $782,000 from Odebrecht between 2004 and 2007, a period when Kuczynski served as economy minister and prime minister in the 2001-2006 administration of President Alejandro Toledo.

When word of those payments became public two weeks, Keiko Fujimori’s Popular Force, which has a majority in Congress, pushed to impeach Kuczynski for having lied when he denied any connections to Odebrecht.

The President addressed Congress last Thursday before the vote on the impeachment motion, telling lawmakers that during his tenure with the Toledo administration, he turned over management of Westfield to then-business partner Gerardo Sepulveda, and that it was the latter who signed the consulting contract with Odebrecht.

Kuczynski said that he was unaware at the time of the work for Odebrecht, as he had erected a “Chinese wall” between himself and Westfield’s operations.

The impeachment bid failed, thanks to the votes of Kenji Fujimori — Keiko’s younger brother – and nine other dissident Popular Force legislators.

At the AG Office, Keiko Fujimori, who lost to Kuczynski in the 2016 presidential runoff, submitted to five hours of questioning about allegations that Popular Force received illegal campaign contributions from Odebrecht over the course of a decade.

The Odebrecht scandal has implicated Peru’s major political parties and every presidential administration going back to 2005.

—IANS