Prosecutors
in Brazil have begun investigating whether former President Inacio Lula da
Silva illegally lobbied for construction firm Odebrecht. The company is Latin
America's largest engineering company.
A spokesman
for the federal prosecutor's office in Brasilia said there was "an
investigation into possible influence peddling by ex-president Lula with the
leaders of other countries on behalf of the construction company
Odebrecht."
The
investigation was launched on July 8, but authorities chose to reveal it only
on Thursday. The former president's foundation issued a statement saying he had
nothing to fear. "We are calm. The Lula Institute is certain of the
transparency and legality of ex-president Lula's activities," spokesman
Jose Chrispiniano said.
Ignacio
Lula da Silva is considered a major world figure and responsible for Brazil's
rise to economic power.
His
country's prosecutors, however, accuse him of using his influence to acquire
billion-dollar deals for Odebrecht in Panama, Venezueala and some African
countries. He is also believed to have convinced the state-owned BNDES bank to
finance the projects.
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| Marcelo Odebrecht was arrested last month |
Some of the
money is supposed to have gone to the ruling Workers' Party. President DilmaRousseff, the chairwoman of Petrobras for seven years, has not been directly
implicated, but calls for her resignation have been getting louder.
mg/gsw (AP, AFP, Reuters)


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