Ecuador former president jailed for eight years over corruption
QUITO: Former Ecuadoran president Rafael Correa was sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison for corruption during his 10-year term in office, the attorney general’s office said Tuesday. Correa — who was president from 2007-17 but now lives in exile in Belgium, where his wife was born — was one of 18 people convicted of bribery, the office said on Twitter.
Correa, one of the feistiest characters in Latin American politics, has always claimed to be a victim of political persecution. He accuses his country’s judges of complicity and hit out at the sentence.
“I know the process and what the judges say is a LIE. They’ve proved absolutely NOTHING. Pure false testimony without evidence,” he wrote on Twitter. He was found guilty of accepting funds from private businesses for his 2013 election campaign in return for state contracts. Attorney General Diana Salazar says various businesses paid $7 million in bribes to secure those contracts. Correa, a leftist economist by training, was implicated over a $6,000 payment to his private account, which he claims was a loan.
Amongst the others sentenced on Tuesday was former vice president Jorge Glas, who since 2017 has been serving a six-year prison sentence in a separate case for accepting a bribe from Brazilian construction giant Odebrecht. Glas was vice-president under Correa from 2013-17 before he was re-elected under current President Lenin Moreno, only to be suspended several months later over the Odebrecht scandal. Correa preceded Moreno in office and battled him for control of the Country Alliance party.
The court also banned all those convicted from political “participation” for 25 years. In any case, Ecuador’s constitution bars those convicted of bribery, illicit enrichment and embezzlement from standing for public office, meaning Correa’s political career is finished.
“This was what they were looking for: manipulating justice to achieve what they never could at the ballot box,” said Correa, who turned 57 on Monday. The former leader said he was “concerned” for his colleagues, adding: “For sure we’ll win (an appeal) at the international level because all this is ridiculous.
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