Guatemalan vice president ousted amid corruption scandal

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Guatemalan vice president ousted amid corruption scandal Moises Castillo / Associated Press People celebrate near the Congress building after learning that Guatemala's Vice President Roxana Baldetti resigned amid a customs corruption scandal that has implicated her former private secretary. Sonia Perez D., Associated Press Saturday, May 9, 2015 | 5:09 p.m. Guatemala's congress voted Saturday to accept the resignation of the country's once-powerful vice

Transcript of Guatemalan vice president ousted amid corruption scandal

Page 1: Guatemalan vice president ousted amid corruption scandal

Guatemalan vice president ousted amid corruption scandal

Moises Castillo / Associated Press

People celebrate near the Congress building after learning that Guatemala's Vice President RoxanaBaldetti resigned amid a customs corruption scandal that has implicated her formerprivate secretary.

Sonia Perez D., Associated Press

Saturday, May 9, 2015 | 5:09 p.m.

Guatemala's congress voted Saturday to accept the resignation of the country's once-powerful vice

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president, who gave up her office amid a customs corruption scandal that has implicated her formerprivate secretary.

In a letter released late Friday, Roxana Baldetti said the move means she is giving up her immunityfrom prosecution and promised "to collaborate with all investigations" into the graft scheme.

President Oscar Perez Molina called the decision "brave" and said it was a personal decision.

Legislators voted 149-0 at a special session to accept her stepping down.

Baldetti is the first Guatemalan vice president to step down due to a corruption case, althoughprosecutors have not implicated her in the scandal and she denies involvement.

The resignation shows the continuing impact of a U.N. commission that has been investigatingcriminal networks and fighting impunity in Guatemala since 2007. It worked with prosecutors whobrought charges in the customs case.

Baldetti's former aide, Juan Carlos Monzon Rojas, is alleged to have been the ringleader of a schemeto defraud the state of millions of dollars by taking bribes in exchange for lower customs duties.Monzon's last known whereabouts were overseas, and he is currently being sought by authorities.

Recent days had seen rising calls for Baldetti's resignation by protesters and influential businessleaders. The country's Constitutional Court has ruled that congress would have the power to stripher of the immunity from prosecution that came with her office.

After the announcement, hundreds of people celebrated in the streets of the capital, shooting offfirecrackers and honking horns.

"Roxana's resignation is a victory for the people!" jubilant protesters chanted in central ConstitutionSquare.

A former journalist and businesswoman, Baldetti was one of the founders of Perez Molina'sconservative Patriotic Party in 2001, served as head of its congressional delegation and was itssecretary-general until earlier this year.

Her resignation adds to disarray for the governing party ahead of the Sept. 6 elections. Its

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presidential candidate, Alejandro Sinibaldi, quit the party last month, complaining of corruption andof feuds with Baldetti. Perez Molina's approval ratings have been plummeting.

Perez Molina said he would send congress a list of three names from which a new vice president canbe selected.

At least 50 private citizens and public officials, including Guatemala's current and former tax chiefs,are suspects in the customs scandal. Prosecutors said 27 are in custody.

Earlier Friday, authorities arrested five lawyers who allegedly bribed a judge to free suspects jailedin connection with the case.

Prosecutors and a U.N. investigative commission said the attorneys paid Judge Marta Sierra Stallingto release the three suspects on bail.

Authorities revoked bail and were seeking to lift Sierra Stalling's judicial immunity in order tolaunch an investigation.

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In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke expressed support of Perez Molina's"efforts to address charges of official corruption in Guatemala," as well as the U.N. panel known asthe International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala.

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