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Fidel Paid for Lula's Presidential Campaign, Says Brazil's Leading Magazine PDF Print E-mail
Written by Émerson Luís   
Monday, 31 October 2005
Brazilian  President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva seems to be very upset with the latest cover story of Veja, Brazil's most popular weekly news magazine.  The publication wrote that Lula's 2002 presidential campaign received a US$ 3 million contribution from Cuba. For parties to get money from a foreign country is something so serious according to Brazil's electoral law, that the ruling Workers Party might simply be done away if the charges are found to be true. The Brazilian President in conversations with advisers, during the weekend, referred to the news as "a fantasy."  

Lula went as far as to call the information "a frame-up" designed to undermine his administration at a time in which the political crisis seemed close to an end. For the President there is no hard proof to back the truthfulness of the news veracity. He got specially angry at the opposition's first reaction. Some of his opponents in Congress have already talked about investigating the allegations in three congressional inquiries that are already under way.  

This morning, the President intends to gather some of his ministers related to political coordination in order to evaluate the damage done by the magazine's story and to find ways to face the charges. Lula has also scheduled a private meeting with Finance Minister Antonio Palocci, later in the day.

Veja's story is an explosive report about the origin of a slush fund used in the presidential campaign that brought Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to power. According to the magazine, US$ 3 million of this under-the-table and illegal money came from Havana.

The publication says that Lula's electoral committee received that amount between August and September of 2002. The magazine writes that it wasn't able to find out how the money came from Cuba to Brasília. Once in Brazil, however. the dollars stayed under the care of Sérgio Cervantes, a Cuban diplomat who has worked in Rio and Brasília representing his country.  

Always according to the Brazilian publication, the money was taken from Brasília to Campinas, in the interior of São Paulo state,  by plane, hidden inside three boxes of liquor: one of Cuban rum and two of Johnnie Walker whiskey. The boxes were carried by Vladimir Poleto, an economist and former aide to Brazil's Finance Minister Antonio Palocci, who at the time was Ribeirão Preto's (in the interior of São Paulo) mayor.

The story of the money transportation is full of details. In Campinas, the dollars were received in the Viracopos Airport by Ralf Barquete, another former aide to Palocci. Barquete came to the airport in a black, armored, Omega car driven by Éder Eustáquio Soares Macedo.

From the airport the car with the money went straight to Lula's presidential election committee in Vila Mariana, a neighborhood in the southern zone of São Paulo. In charge of the committee at the time was Delúbio Soares, the PT's treasurer who was stripped from his post recently.
 
Rogério Buratti, who also worked in Ribeirão Preto's City Hall told Veja that he had been sought by Ralf Barquete, at the request of Palocci, to advise on the best way to bring US$ 3 million dollars from Cuba. He replied that it could be done with the help of "doleiros" (illegal dollar dealers)."

Buratti told the magazine that after that contact he didn't hear about the subject anymore, but was told later on that the money had been brought in successfully.

Vladimir Poleto, who is now a business consultant was a reluctant informer. Veja tells that he was always mentioning that he wasn't comfortable with the revelations because this could mean the ousting of Lula.

Poleto conceded, however, that he himself had transported the money from Brasília to Campinas, flying as a passenger in a plane where he was the only passenger. He made a point. however, that, at the time, he thought he was carrying boxes of whiskey and rum.

Only later he was made aware of the boxes real content: 'Who told me that was Ralf Barquete. The value was 1.4 million dollars".
After hearing about the story from a Veja reporter, Palocci commented: "I never heard anything about that. From what I hear now, it seems to me something very ingenious."  
 
Brazil's Law 9096, approved in 1995, forbids any political party from receiving foreign money. The penalty for such a crime might lead to the registration cancellation of the political party that accepts this kind of contribution.

Lula wouldn't lose his mandate, but he or any other PT candidate would not be able to run for any political post in the next year's national election. The Brazilian electoral legislation requires that candidates are registered into a party at least one year before the election occurs.
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.....Lula......
written by Guest, October 31, 2005



....said exactly the same...when at first....the vote buying scandal emerged !!!!! Now......you know....HE was wrong !!!!!! Smile........

Opposition parties, whoever they are, is good for democracy because they will always reveal what is wrong with the government in place !!!!!! And this is regardless if the government is leftist or rightist !!!!!!

Hopefully there will be a complete investigation on these new accusations, because we also heard that Venezuela and Lybia also contrinuted to Lula's funding...but not much came out....so far !!!!!!
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A Woman of \'Weak Faith\' Here...
written by Guest, October 31, 2005
Today I will second Arnaldo Jabor, a self-proclaimed 'man of
weak faith' :

I am being molded by this crisis. I feel hammers sculpting me,
I feel sandpapers in my sensibility and little by little a
rhinoceros skin will thicken my feelings. Thanks to God, I am
losing vain hopes, winning a new wisdom. When I hear minister
Carlos Velloso saying he gave habeas-corpus for Maluf-father
and Maluf-son because he pitied 'father and son in jail' I
realize how heartless I am when thinking of the thousands
still in jail despite having already payed their time, sick,
with Aids and tuberculosis. I feel embarrassed that my heart
is still so poor that I don't capture Maluf's 'fine' pain and
that of his son, nostalgic of the 500 million dollars they
diverted from public projects and with their family's
happiness destroyed by the solitude of a cell. I don't know
what compassion is.

Today I notice that underneath what appears to be 'robbery'
there is an ongoing project for this country. It is me who has
to change. That will give me moral relief, to see that my
'itches' are pathetic and that it is me who has to align with
post-modernity.

I know I'm wrong but I'm already changing, looking forward to
the day I will arrive at the truth and become one of those
great men that fight for the good of the Brazilian people,
ignoring small-bourgeois ethical details. God willing, one of
these days I will still be a perfect SOB!

:-)




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