Accusations Are Pure Fantasy Says Brazil’s Finance Minister

"There was no money from Cuba in President Lula’s campaign," the Brazilian Minister of Finance, Antônio Palocci, told the senators on the Parliamentary Investigatory Commission (CPI) on Bingo Parlors, Thursday, January 26.

In his opinion, the charge published by the press that Cuba transferred funds to help elect the president is "phantasmagorical."

According to Palocci, the Workers’ Party (PT) did not receive money from Cuba or any other country. During the 2002 presidential contest, the minister was coordinator of the economic program for Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s campaign.

The alleged transfer of Cuban dollars to help the campaign was denounced last year by Veja, Brazil’s most traditional weekly newsmagazine.

In an interview for the magazine, Vladimir Poleto, who worked for the city of Ribeirão Preto, in the state of São Paulo, when Palocci was mayor, supposedly confessed having transported the money in beverage containers.

In his testimony, the minister of Finance denied having had any direct relationship with Poleto.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Chávez Can’t Take South America’s Leadership Away from Brazil

This month’s controversial knife-edge win for the conservative Partido de Acción Nacional candidate, Filipe ...

For Brazil UN Human Rights Council Should Guarantee Life Free from Fear

The United Nations Human Rights Council is composed of 47 countries, elected among the ...

Higher Oil Price Boosts Brazil Imports from Arabs by 69%

Brazilian imports from the Arab countries posted significant growth in the first four months ...

Jobim in New English

Do you wince each time you hear these pearls?I took your picture with my ...

Greens Lose, Tractors Already Roaring in Brazilian Amazon’s Belo Monte

The dry season has arrived in the Amazon and Norte Energia, the consortium that ...

Cargo Movement in Brazil’s Rio Grande Port Up 23%

Rio Grande do Sul's Rio Grande Port, in Brazil's South, saw the highest throughput ...

Brazilian Presidential Candidate Serra: a Life of Opposition and Solid Education

Brazilian presidential candidate José Serra was born into a working-class family of Italian immigrants ...

Brazil’s Top Vote Getter, a Clown, May Be Barred from Congress for Illiteracy

Brazilian clown Tiririca, the candidate who won the most votes as House representative in ...

Brazil: Fun Around the Fire

Festas juninas were brought to Brazil by Portuguese and Spanish settlers celebrating the harvest ...

Exports Way Up in Brazil

The year’s accumulated surplus on the Brazilian trade balance has already beaten an historic ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`