The government of Brazilian acting president Michel Temer took a fresh hit on Monday as the anti-corruption minister resigned after a recording revealed him criticizing a probe into graft at state oil giant Petrobras, officials said.
Fabiano Silveira was the second minister to exit in the span of a week from Temer’s government, which has only been in power for 18 days following the suspension of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff for an impeachment trial.
In audio released by Globo television on Sunday night, Silveira was heard talking to Senate President Renan Calheiros and Sergio Machado, the president of Petrobras subsidiary Transpetro, both of whom are being investigated in the embezzlement probe.
Photo: AP
In the recording, Silveira was heard saying that the prosecution in the case was “lost” and advised Machado on how to protect himself from the investigation.
The recording was made in March when Silveira was serving on the National Council of Justice.
Brazilian media said Machado recorded the conversation, trading the information for leniency from prosecution.
The presidential palace’s media office confirmed Silveira’s resignation.
In his resignation letter, excerpts of which were published by Brazilian media, Silveira defended himself and said his remarks were “generic comments and simple opinion, amplified by the climate of political exasperation to which we all bear witness.”
On Monday, officials from the Brazilian Ministry of Transparency, Supervision and Control created by Temer to fight rampant corruption, staged protests to call for Silveira’s ouster.
Corruption watchdog Transparency International also called for Silveira to step down.
His exit comes about one week after a main Temer ally, Romero Juca, was fired from his planning minister post after another leaked recording in which he apparently said impeaching Rousseff could be a way to derail the Petrobras probe.
The probe, codenamed Operation Car Wash, has seen investigations and prosecutions opened against dozens of politicians and executives — a who’s who of the business and political elite in Brazil — including Juca.
Temer, who was vice president and took over from Rousseff after her suspension for an impeachment trial on May 12, is trying to push through economic reforms to pull Brazil out of deep recession.
It was Machado who was also speaking in the tape that led to the firing of Juca.
Machado is cooperating with prosecutors and his testimony could snare other members of Temer’s centrist PMDB party.
After Juca was fired last week, Temer said the probe into Petrobras would not only continue, but that he himself plans to press for it to be even tougher.
Machado’s appearance on the scene is also bad news for the Calheiros. It is in the Senate where in a few months Rousseff will stand trial on charges of cooking government books to make her budget look better in 2014 as she sought re-election.
In another conversation leaked last week, Calheiros is heard calling for changes in the law that lets people who confess to being part of the Petrobras scandal receive lighter sentences in exchange for details of the scheme.
These plea bargains were key to breaking open the scandal, in which bribes and kickbacks are estimated to have cost the company about US$2 billion over the course of a decade.
The scandal fueled an atmosphere of grassroots fury over corruption and economic decay in a country that was the poster child for emerging economies just a few years ago, and helped lead to the collapse of support for Rousseff and her government.
Temer’s replacing Rousseff has been messy. He triggered complaints immediately by appointing a Cabinet made up exclusively of conservative white men, including three under investigation for the Petrobras scandal.
OUTRAGE: The former strongman was accused of corruption and responsibility for the killings of hundreds of thousands of political opponents during his time in office Indonesia yesterday awarded the title of national hero to late president Suharto, provoking outrage from rights groups who said the move was an attempt to whitewash decades of human rights abuses and corruption that took place during his 32 years in power. Suharto was a US ally during the Cold War who presided over decades of authoritarian rule, during which up to 1 million political opponents were killed, until he was toppled by protests in 1998. He was one of 10 people recognized by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto in a televised ceremony held at the presidential palace in Jakarta to mark National
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr yesterday vowed that those behind bogus flood control projects would be arrested before Christmas, days after deadly back-to-back typhoons left swathes of the country underwater. Scores of construction firm owners, government officials and lawmakers — including Marcos’ cousin congressman — have been accused of pocketing funds for substandard or so-called “ghost” infrastructure projects. The Philippine Department of Finance has estimated the nation’s economy lost up to 118.5 billion pesos (US$2 billion) since 2023 due to corruption in flood control projects. Criminal cases against most of the people implicated are nearly complete, Marcos told reporters. “We don’t file cases for
LANDMARK: After first meeting Trump in Riyadh in May, al-Sharaa’s visit to the White House today would be the first by a Syrian leader since the country’s independence Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa arrived in the US on Saturday for a landmark official visit, his country’s state news agency SANA reported, a day after Washington removed him from a terrorism blacklist. Sharaa, whose rebel forces ousted long-time former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad late last year, is due to meet US President Donald Trump at the White House today. It is the first such visit by a Syrian president since the country’s independence in 1946, according to analysts. The interim leader met Trump for the first time in Riyadh during the US president’s regional tour in May. US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack earlier
‘ATTACK ON CIVILIZATION’: The culture ministry released drawings of six missing statues representing the Roman goddess of Venus, the tallest of which was 40cm Investigators believe that the theft of several ancient statues dating back to the Roman era from Syria’s national museum was likely the work of an individual, not an organized gang, officials said on Wednesday. The National Museum of Damascus was closed after the heist was discovered early on Monday. The museum had reopened in January as the country recovers from a 14-year civil war and the fall of the 54-year al-Assad dynasty last year. On Wednesday, a security vehicle was parked outside the main gate of the museum in central Damascus while security guards stood nearby. People were not allowed in because