- Title: Guatemalan president may be investigated in campaign finance case
- Date: 4th September 2017
- Summary: GUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA (SEPTEMBER 4, 2017) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (Spanish) SPOKESPERSON FOR SUPREME COURT, ANGEL PINEDA, SAYING: "In the cases against the President (Jimmy Morales) that have been brought, there are four (cases). They have been thoroughly looked at. Three of them were rejected and (the remaining case) has been admitted for processing before the Public Ministry and CICIG (Guatemala's International Commission Against Impunity), against the president for the alleged crime of illicit electoral financing. As a result, a report will be sent to Congress to continue with this process."
- Embargoed: 19th September 2017 00:36
- Keywords: Guatemala President Jimmy Morales campaign financing corruption International Commission against Impunity
- Location: GUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA
- City: GUATEMALA CITY, GUATEMALA
- Country: Guatemala
- Topics: Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA0036X6MJ47
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text:Guatemala's Constitutional Court opened the door on Monday (September 4) to an inquiry of President Jimmy Morales for illegal campaign financing, but the Central American country's Congress will have the final say on whether his immunity is removed.
Guatemala's attorney general and a U.N.-backed anti-graft body said last month that they are seeking to investigate Morales over suspected illicit campaign financing. To strip Morales of his presidential immunity, prosecutors now need the go-ahead from a two-thirds majority in Congress. He could then be formally investigated and charged.
Under the leadership of veteran Colombian prosecutor Ivan Velasquez, Guatemala's International Commission against Impunity (CICIG) has been a thorn in Morales' side, investigating his son and brother, and then seeking to remove his own immunity over more than $800,000 in allegedly unexplained campaign funds. Morales has denied any wrongdoing. Morales struck back late last month, attempting to expel Velasquez in a move that provoked international outrage. But the nation's constitutional court ruled against the president, finding he did not have the authority to fire the CICIG head.
Morales won office in 2015 running on a platform of honest governance after his predecessor, Otto Perez Molina, was forced to resign and imprisoned in a multi-million dollar graft case stemming from a CICIG investigation. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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