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Venezuela ex-prosecutor says she has evidence of Maduro corruption

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BRASILIA/CARACAS, (Reuters) - Dismissed Venezuelan prosecutor Luisa Ortega said yesterday she had evidence that President Nicolas Maduro was involved in corruption with constructi­on company Odebrecht.

Ortega, 59, was a key player in Venezuela’s government but broke with it in March. She fled last week to Colombia by boat and yesterday morning landed in Brazil.

Ortega said she had been persecuted in an effort to hide details of high-level corruption, saying she had proof, though she offered none.

Ortega linked the Odebrecht scandal with Maduro and Socialist Party heavyweigh­ts including Diosdado Cabello and Jorge Rodriguez.

Ortega said she had evidence that Cabello received some $100 million from the Brazilian company. “The internatio­nal community must investigat­e such cases,” she told a news conference. Venezuelan authoritie­s did not respond to a request for comment.

Odebrecht admitted in a settlement with U.S. and Brazilian prosecutor­s to paying bribes across 12 countries to win contracts. According to a U.S. court ruling, between 2001 and 2016, Odebrecht paid about $788 million in bribes in countries including Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela.

Ortega was removed from her position early this month by Venezuela’s newly formed constituen­t assembly, a controvers­ial pro-government body whose installati­on was called dictatoria­l by government­s worldwide.

Maduro said on Tuesday he would seek Ortega’s arrest, accusing her of having worked for some time with the United States. Maduro blames Washington for many of Venezuela’s problems, including triple-digit inflation, shortages of basic goods and months of antigovern­ment unrest.

 ??  ?? Luisa Ortega
Luisa Ortega

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