Exclusive: Brazil investigating possible corruption at Olympic
venues
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[May 26, 2016]
By Brad Brooks
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazilian
investigators have expanded their probe into possible corruption
around the staging of the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro this
August to include all the venues and services financed with federal
funds, a lead prosecutor told Reuters.
Federal investigations have previously focused on "legacy"
modernization projects not directly tied to the Games but this newly
disclosed probe includes Olympic Park and the Deodoro area where
Olympic venues are located, federal prosecutor Leandro Mitidieri
said.
"It's not just the physical works we're looking at - it is contracts
for services, security, everything that used federal funds," he told
Reuters from his Rio de Janeiro office late on Tuesday.
The Olympics were meant to showcase Brazil's rise as a global power.
Instead, they will take place as suspended President Dilma Rousseff
faces an impeachment trial, the economy suffers its worst recession
since the 1930s, an outbreak of the Zika virus prompts health
concerns and a massive corruption scandal infuriates Brazilians.
Mitidieri said his team is also investigating what happened to
federal funds earmarked for cleaning Guanabara Bay, where Olympic
sailing events will take place, and lakes that surround the main
Olympic venues in western Rio's Barra neighborhood.
Those bodies of water have heavy sewage contamination and remain
badly polluted despite promises to drastically improve them as a
legacy achievement of the Olympics.
Another team of federal prosecutors, along with federal police, is
investigating whether the Rio de Janeiro state water utility company
Cedae committed environmental crimes by not properly treating sewage
in Rio's metropolitan area of 12 million people, Mitidieri said.
Rio utility Cedae said it had not been notified about the
investigation and could not make a comment without understanding
more about the probe.
Mitidieri would not say if his team had uncovered any proof of
corruption - but he added that detailed announcements about the
investigation's results would be made in coming weeks.
Five construction firms are building most of the 39 billion reais
($10.8 billion) worth of venues and infrastructure needed for Rio's
Olympics. The figure includes at least 1.76 billion reais in federal
funds, according to documents from Brazil's federal accounting
court.
All five companies are caught up in an investigation into price
fixing and kickbacks at state-run oil company Petrobras, a two-year
probe that has seen scores of top executives and politicians jailed,
charged or under investigation.
The Petrobras <PETR4.SA> investigation is what led federal police
and prosecutors to begin looking at possible corruption tied to the
Olympics.
Federal authorities have already said they are investigating the
Porto Maravilha project, an 8 billion real facelift of Rio's
dilapidated port area, and also the expansion of the city's metro
line to the Olympic area in Barra.
Court files made public in March showed police uncovered documents
from executives of Latin America's largest construction firm,
Odebrecht SA [ODBES.UL], that referenced 1 million reais in
suspected bribes connected to those two big legacy projects.
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Olympic and Paralympic Games mascots Vinicius (L) and Tom pose
during the opening ceremony of the new terminal at the international
airport Galeao, which is expected to receive 1.5 million passengers
during the 2016 Rio Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 19,
2016. REUTERS/Pilar Olivares
Odebrecht is at the center of the Petrobras scandal and is involved
in over half of all Olympic projects by value, according to
contracts reviewed by Reuters.
A spokeswoman for Odebrecht said by email that the company had no
comment to make.
Mitidieri declined to provide details on which companies are the
focus of the federal probe, though he did note that OAS SA [OAS.UL]
and Queiroz Galvao had "a lot of activity" in the Deodoro region of
the Olympics. OAS did not respond to requests for comment. A
spokeswoman for Queiroz Galvao wrote in an email that the company
had not been notified about the investigation and had no further
comment.
Rio de Janeiro's city government oversees most Olympic construction
projects, though a few are financed by the federal or state
government. The city government says contracts were mostly funded
with private resources and that all bids were overseen by
regulators.
Rio 2016, the local organizing committee, handles some non-permanent
structures like seating, and has a budget of 7 billion reais.
The federal government, Mitidieri noted, is by law responsible for
any debts the local organizing committee may incur.
The Rio 2016 local organizing committee referred questions to the
mayor's office.
The mayor's office said it would not comment without knowing what
exact contracts were under investigation. It added in its emailed
response that all contracts were carried out in a transparent manner
and that city officials were prepared to provide any clarifications
necessary.
($1 = 3.6 reais)
(Reporting by Brad Brooks; Editing by Kieran Murray and Frances
Kerry)
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