Olympics | Brazil attorney general alleges bribes tied to Rio games

Brazil’s Speaker Eduardo Cunha

Brazil’s Speaker Eduardo Cunha

Brazil’s attorney general is investigating allegations that bribes were paid to a powerful lawmaker to help secure contracts for the building of venues and other works for next year’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
In documents obtained by The Associated Press, Attorney General Rodrigo Janot accuses Eduardo Cunha, speaker of the lower house in Brazil’s two-chamber legislature, of receiving 1.9 million Brazilian reals (USD475,000) from the construction company OAS to craft legislation favorable for the company.
Cunha has called the allegations “ridiculous” in comments to local media, while OAS refused to comment.
The investigation is the first linking corruption to the billions being spent on Olympic building projects.
OAS is involved with building the BMX, mountain bike and canoeing venues at Deodoro in northern Rio, the second-largest cluster of Olympic venues.
The constructor is also involved in work on high-speed bus lanes, the 8 billion reals ($2 billion) renovation of Rio’s port, and projects to clean the polluted waters in Barra da Tijuca, the area where the main Olympic Park is being built.
The International Olympic Committee referred an email seeking comment to local organizers, who did not immediately respond.
Under the Brazilian system, the prosecutor is largely an investigator and it’s up to the court — in this case Brazil’s Supreme Court — to accept a case.
In the 190-page report, Janot says that Cunha “treated the lower house as a center for trading bribes for bills.” AP

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