THAT THERE MAY BE A FAIRER SOCIETY IN GHANA - ONE IN WHICH ALL THE PEOPLE, NOT JUST A POWERFUL AND GREEDY FEW, BENEFIT FROM THE NATION'S WEALTH!
Wednesday, 25 November 2015
We Must Not Allow The GNPC To End Up Like Petrobras - A Hapless Victim Of High-Level Corruption
It is instructive that Ghana has turned to Brazil for a number of its infrastructure projects: As it happens both nations are dominated by corrupt ruling elites. And, interestingly, ordinary people in the two nations, have become thoroughly fed up with the unparalleled greed of their vampire-elites.
Since the Brazilian business world has now become a byword for corruption we need to keep the spotlight on projects funded with loans from Brazil that are executed by Brazilian construction firms - and scrutinise them closely: to ensure we are not also being shortchanged by our ruling elites.
A number of companies in Brazil, including the country's top five engineering firms, faced charges of overcharging Brazil's state-owned oil company, Petrobras, by over 1.2 billion dollars, in sundry inflated contracts.
The question is: In a nation such as Ghana, in which politicians routinely resort to single-sourcing projects - so that they can pick and choose companies that will benefit them personally, and benefit their political parties too - how do we know that those Brazilian engineering companies executing contracts here, are not also grossly overcharging Ghana?
For the benefit of anti-corruption campaigners in Ghana, this blog is reproducing an article from the online version of Bloomberg Markets, which outlines the case against the firms accused of overcharging Petrobras, and bribing its executives and a number of Brazil's leading politicians, to enable them get away with the massive rip-off of Brazil's state-owned oil company.
One's hope, in reproducing this culled article from Bloomberg Markets, is that it will alert anti-corruption campaigners, such as #OccupyGhana, and enable them take the necessary steps needed to ensure that the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), is not allowed to suffer a similar fate - in which crooked Ghanaian politicians and corrupt top public officials collude with private-sector entities (local and foreign) to rip-off the GNPC massively too.
In reading the story, it is hard for one to avoid coming to the conclusion that Ghana's rich and powerful dominant-elites, seem to operate in similar fashion to those in Brazil, in their determination to divvy up our nation's wealth, regardless of the consequences.
Civil society anti-corruption entities need to intensify their fight against high-level corruption in Ghana, before it erodes our country's moral fabric completely, and finally ends up ruining our beautiful and pleasant country. Please read on:
The Betrayal of Brazil
As
a massive corruption scandal unfolds, Brazilians are facing some stark
truths: The powerful and connected are still dividing the country’s
riches among themselves. The past decade’s economic miracle was in large
part a mirage. And the future is again on hold.
Ricardo Stuckert/PR; Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images
Then-president
Lula, with his hand on the wheel, at the groundbreaking for Petrobras’s
Abreu e Lima refinery in 2007 (left). A protest in the streets of São
Paulo on March 15. More than a million people marched in Brazil’s cities
on that day.
In mid-2013, Brazilian federal police investigator Erika Mialik Marena noticed something strange.
Alberto Youssef, suspected of running an illicit black-market bank
for the rich, had paid 250,000 reais (about $125,000 at the time) for a Land Rover.
The black Evoque SUV ended up as a gift for Paulo Roberto Costa,
formerly a division manager at Brazil’s national oil company, Petrobras.
“We were investigating a money-laundering case, and Petrobras wasn’t
our target at all,” says Marena. “Paulo was just another client of his.
So we started to ask, ‘Why is he getting an expensive car from a money
launderer? Who is that guy?’”
Marena had spent the previous decade building cases against money
launderers, and Youssef had been a perennial target. He’d been arrested
at least nine times for using private jets, armored cars, clandestine
pickups by bagmen, and a web of front companies to move illicit cash.
But Youssef had been spared serious jail time by testifying repeatedly
against other doleiros, Brazilian slang for specialists in laundering unreported cash.
The Petrobras connection suggested Youssef was into something bigger.
Marena and her partner, investigator Márcio Anselmo, dug into Costa
from offices in the modern glass-and-concrete federal police
headquarters in the city of Curitiba, 400 kilometers (250 miles) south
of São Paulo. A dozen more investigators and prosecutors joined, and the
case grew so big that Brazil’s attorney general set up a task force in
temporary office space across town.
By March 2014, federal judge Sérgio Moro had begun rounding up dozens
of suspects. (In Brazil’s justice system, a judge formally charges a
defendant, approves major steps in the investigation by police and
prosecutors, hears the evidence, and then decides whether the defendant
is guilty or innocent.) They were accused in Moro’s court of
participating in a bid-rigging scheme of astounding proportions. For
years, prosecutors have alleged in Moro’s court, a cartel of Brazil’s
biggest and richest builders fixed a vast swath of the world’s
seventh-biggest economy, subverting competition in the oil industry and,
possibly, the huge public works programs that drive growth and
employment.
Brazilians are riveted by the scandal, nicknamed Operation Carwash
because some funds were laundered through a service station. Moro has
ordered more than a dozen dragnets so far, and the arrests of
executives, bankers, politicians, and bagmen, marching some to jail past
a phalanx of television cameras. One suspect took his private jet to
Curitiba to turn himself in.
Another spent his last hours of freedom in a
hotel suite on Rio de Janeiro’s fabled Ipanema beach to avoid being
taken from his home handcuffed. The arrested shared four holding cells
in Curitiba police headquarters with unenclosed communal toilets. Some
slept on mattresses strewn on the bare floor. A dozen have confessed to
making or accepting payoffs and rigging contracts, some in videotaped
testimony that is posted online.
One former Petrobras manager, Pedro Barusco, described taking almost
$100 million in bribes; he’s since returned most of the money in a bid
for leniency.
Since March 2014, prosecutors have accused more than 110 people of
corruption, money laundering, and other financial crimes. Six
construction and engineering firms have been accused of illegal
enrichment in what is known as a noncriminal misconduct action. On April
22, Moro delivered the first convictions. He found Costa and Youssef
guilty of money laundering, including the Land Rover purchase. Moro gave
both men reduced sentences—two years’ house arrest for Costa and three
years in prison for Youssef—for cooperating with prosecutors.
All of that is something of a preview of the big show: Prosecutors
say they may accuse some of Brazil’s largest builders with running an
illegal cartel. “It’s been clearly proven in this case that there was a
criminal scheme inside Petrobras that involved a cartel, bid rigging,
bribes to government officials and politicians, and money laundering,”
Moro wrote in sentencing Costa and Youssef. “There will be a cartel
indictment,” says Carlos Lima, a lead prosecutor in the case. “I don’t
like to get ahead of myself and say this will happen, but it will. It’s
just a matter of time.”
Judge Sérgio Moro
Rodolfo Buhrer/La Imagem/Fotoarena
Dilma Rousseff and Lula
Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images
In filings in Judge Moro’s court, prosecutors have
named 16 companies that allegedly formed a cartel to fix Petrobras
contracts between 2006 and 2014. The list includes some of Brazil’s
largest construction and engineering firms, including Camargo Correa,
OAS, UTC Engenharia, and the biggest of them all, Construtora Norberto
Odebrecht. All of these companies deny being part of a cartel, except
Camargo Correa, which declined to comment.
Petrobras says it knew nothing about the bid rigging and is
“collaborating” with authorities in the investigation. As to whether it
was the victim of a cartel, “the company is certain,” Mario Jorge Silva,
Petrobras’s executive manager for performance, said at an April 22 news
conference. In financial filings, Petrobras says 199.6 billion reais’
worth of contracts were rigged by the alleged cartel.
For years, a co-owner of the engineering firm UTC called members to
meetings at his offices in São Paulo via text messages, according to
testimony and documents submitted in Moro’s court. The participants were
greeted by an assistant, who handed out name tags.
At the meetings,
executives took copious notes detailing how the alleged cartel would
divvy up Petrobras contracts, at inflated prices. One builder put
together a 2½-page encoded guide for group members that describes contract bidding as a soccer tournament, with leagues and teams. Another document
drawn up by a group member lists the chosen winners of upcoming bidding
for 14 contracts for a refinery, with the title Fluminense Final Bingo
Proposal, using a nickname for the state of Rio de Janeiro.
Prosecutors say the builders got away with it by paying kickbacks,
usually 3 percent, on every contract. Petrobras estimates that the graft
added up to at least 6.2 billion reais, much of which, prosecutors say,
was funneled into the war chests of the parties that backed Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva, president of the country from 2003 to 2010, and his
handpicked successor, Dilma Rousseff. Lula and Rousseff haven’t been
charged with wrongdoing, but special prosecutors have opened criminal
investigations into more than 50 members of congress and other
politicians implicated in the corruption scheme.
It’s not just the drama of the snowballing scandal that holds
Brazilians’ attention. There is a growing resignation—and anger—that Brazil,
a country that seemed so close to joining the ranks of the world’s
developed nations, isn’t going to pull it off. Lula inspired the country
with promises of a “new Brazil” that would leave behind five centuries
of poverty and corruption. Brazilians now understand that behind Lula’s
message was a rigged, corrupt game that enriched a few and hobbled the
country’s ability to compete.
A corruption scandal is the last thing Brazil’s economy needs: It’s
already mired in the worst four-year slump in a quarter century. Finance
Minister Joaquim Levy is trying to close deficits to avert a
catastrophic downgrade of Brazil’s credit rating to junk. He proposes to
cut social programs that serve millions of people.
Perhaps more serious, the scandal has corroded Brazil’s democracy,
weakening Rousseff’s government so much it doesn’t have the clout to get
major legislation through congress. Rousseff’s approval ratings slid to
9 percent in April, the worst for a Brazilian president ever. On March
15 and again on April 12, throngs of people poured onto the streets of
Brazil’s large cities, demanding an end to corruption and the
impeachment of Rousseff. The spoiled fortunes have revived, with a new
bitterness, an old, popular refrain: “Brazil is the country of the
future and always will be.”
One muggy February morning, Antônio Delfim Netto
sits in his office in an old stone house in São Paulo, incredulous over
the reach of the Petrobras scandal. But perhaps the 87-year-old
economist shouldn’t be surprised. In a way, Netto laid the foundation
for Brazil’s intertwined world of politics, business, and finance.
In 1969, at the height of the military dictatorship that took power
after a coup in 1964 and ruled Brazil until March 1985, Netto, as
finance minister, designed a policy called market reserve. It gave
Brazilian builders a lock on government contracts by shutting out most
foreign competitors. Tax breaks and subsidized credit followed.
The
military commanders had plans for huge public works to tie together the
vast, uninhabited expanses of Brazil, and a few family-owned builders
got the big contracts. “We needed the builders to be strong and
completely loyal to Brazil,” says Netto, his broad torso dwarfed by his
big wooden desk. Two-dozen framed caricatures of Netto by Brazil’s most
famous cartoonists cover the walls, and some of his tens of thousands of
economics books fill a shelf.
As Netto engineered protectionist policies, the builders cultivated
ties to the dictators, according to the National Truth Commission, which
issued a report in December about abuses during the military
dictatorship. Camargo Correa, implicated in the current scandal, was
among the companies that won favor by helping fund Operation
Bandeirantes, a campaign to hunt down and torture suspected insurgents
in the 1970s, the commission concluded. One of the operation’s victims
was Rousseff, who was then a young member of an armed leftist opposition
group. She was arrested and tortured. (Netto said in a Truth Commission
hearing last year that he had no knowledge of any torture.)
Antônio Delfim Netto
Marcos Issa/Bloomberg
Construtora Norberto Odebrecht, the largest builder in Latin America
by revenue, is perhaps the most adept of all Brazil’s builders at
intertwining business with politics. That has been the case since 1944,
when Norberto Odebrecht, then a soft-spoken 24-year-old engineer,
convinced a state bank to bail out his father’s bankrupt construction
company, Emílio Odebrecht & Cia., in the city of Salvador in
northeastern Brazil. Norberto then created the company that bears his
name, which absorbed the operations of his father’s business. The
construction company is now part of Odebrecht SA, a conglomerate with 15
divisions spread across 21 countries.
Petrobras was critical to Odebrecht’s growth in the 1950s and 1960s.
The company won a slew of Petrobras contracts to build pipelines,
canals, power plants, and oil wells across Brazil’s northeast. One of
Odebrecht’s first big jobs outside the northeast was Petrobras’s
27-story headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, completed in 1971. The imposing
concrete monolith is across the street from the sloping dark-glass
headquarters of the state development bank, BNDES, which Odebrecht also
built.
The military dictatorship continued to steer contracts to Odebrecht,
including those for Rio’s international airport and the Angra Nuclear
Power Plant. Odebrecht also worked political ties to win business
outside Brazil, starting with contracts to build a hydroelectric plant
in Peru and reroute a river in dictator Augusto Pinochet’s Chile. In
1981, four Odebrecht executives flew to Moscow on a trade mission with
Netto, who was planning minister at the time. Odebrecht wanted the
government’s help swaying the Soviets to persuade allies to give it
business, Netto says. The trip helped produce major contracts in Brazil
and Peru and Odebrecht’s first project in Angola. “There’s nothing
strange about any of that; it’s what governments do for their companies
all the time,” says Netto.
Norberto’s son, Emílio, became CEO of the company in 1991. Shortly
after that, São Paulo’s state governor, Mário Covas, introduced Emílio
to a leader who’d been jailed 90 days by the military regime: Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva.
Corinthians Arena, in São Paulo, built by Odebrecht
Agencia Estado via AP Images
Bloomberg
Marcelo Odebrecht, who succeeded his father, Emílio,
in 2008, tells the story in an interview at Odebrecht’s São Paulo
headquarters. “He said, ‘Emílio, this is one of the politicians with the
brightest future in Brazil. It’s worth knowing him,’” Marcelo says.
“Since then, we have always had interaction with Lula.”
Odebrecht poured money into political campaigns, including Lula’s,
mirroring a practice by all the major builders. The builders being
investigated in the Petrobras scandal legally contributed 344 million
reais to political parties in 2014, an election year. About half went to
the three parties implicated in the scandal, according to Brazilian
election records. The share of Odebrecht and its subsidiaries was 88
million reais, most to the three parties.
Marcelo Odebrecht says his company has contributed to about 150
members of congress. “If you believe in a guy who’s going to be
important and can support you in congress, you have to support him,” he
says. “If you are someone who contributes to someone, at the least he’s
going to give you a meeting and listen.’’
After Lula won the presidency in 2002, in the biggest landslide ever
in Brazil, Odebrecht grew rapidly. Lula and his Workers’ Party promised a
revolution that would take Brazil to the next level, with bold public
works projects at the center of his plans. Odebrecht was awarded some of
the biggest contracts.
Early on, Lula introduced Marcelo to Rousseff, who was then energy
minister. “We interacted with her a lot,” Marcelo says. “We’ve always
had a relationship of trust.”
Lula had foreign policy goals as well; he talked of transforming
Brazil into a sort of superpower for the developing world. That meant
new business for Brazilian construction companies in places such as Cuba
and Ecuador, funded with subsidized financing from BNDES. Under Lula
and then Rousseff, Odebrecht projects outside Brazil were showered with
5.5 billion reais of BNDES financing from 2009 to 2014, more than any
other Brazilian company except for the aircraft maker Embraer.
Marcelo Odebrecht, CEO of Construtora Norberto Odebrecht
Ricardo Stuckert/PR
Odebrecht has not been charged in connection with Operation Carwash;
neither has any individual employed by the company. “Odebrecht never
participated in cartels, whether in contracts with Petrobras or any
other government or private client,” the company said in a statement to
Bloomberg. Nevertheless, the company is being investigated, with other
builders, in at least three criminal and regulatory probes. In November,
Moro ordered federal agents to search the homes and offices of two
Odebrecht executives. The searches did not result in charges being
filed.
One of those executives was Márcio Faria. According to sworn
testimony in Moro’s court by Youssef, the convicted money launderer,
Faria negotiated with Costa a 20-million-real payoff for 4.5 billion
reais in Petrobras refinery contracts the company won in December 2009.
Youssef said the bribe was funneled to politicians.
Faria, now a director of an Odebrecht industrial engineering
division, referred questions to Odebrecht. Faria didn’t do anything
illegal in business dealings with Petrobras, Odebrecht said in a written
statement. “Odebrecht denies making any payments or deposits into
supposed accounts of any executive or ex-executive,” the company said,
referring to Petrobras.
Since Lula left office, on Jan. 1, 2011, Odebrecht has flown the
former president outside Brazil as a paid speaker at events for clients
and business groups. “We are trying to strengthen the country’s image,”
Marcelo says. “I see that everywhere in the world.”
Federal prosecutors have opened a preliminary influence-peddling
inquiry into whether Lula used his connections to persuade BNDES to
provide subsidized financing for Odebrecht projects. Lula, Odebrecht,
and BNDES each denied any wrongdoing.
Netto, the economist, has advised every president save one in the
past three decades. He understands how power is wielded in Brazil.
Still, he says, he’s astounded by the cartel that is alleged to have
penetrated Petrobras. “What’s shocking is how a cartel colluded with the
state in Brazil’s most important company,” says Netto, shaking his head
in disbelief. “But I don’t have any regrets for what I did. Those
companies built modern Brazil.”
Lula at Abreu e Lima in 2009
Programa de Aceleração do Crescimento/flickr
In early September 2007, Lula trudged through a
driving rain at the construction site at Petrobras’s Abreu e Lima
refinery in northeastern Brazil’s Pernambuco state. Wearing white work
gloves and a Petrobras hard hat, he climbed onto a backhoe and helped
steer the machine’s steel bucket into the red earth, breaking ground on
the project. Petrobras would build Abreu e Lima with financing from
then–Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, a socialist like Lula, to turn
that country’s tarlike crude into fuel for Brazilians. (Venezuela later
backed out of the agreement.) Every real would be spent wisely by
Petrobras, Lula said, and Rousseff, then Lula’s chief of staff and
chairman of Petrobras, would make sure of it. “They used to say that
Petrobras didn’t have to justify spending to anyone,” Lula said. “But
today I will put Dilma Rousseff on top of it.”
In the months after Lula’s visit, prosecutors say, the cartel made
plans for Abreu e Lima. In April or May 2008, Rogerio Araújo, then a
director of Odebrecht’s industrial engineering division, handed Barusco,
executive manager of Petrobras’s engineering division, a list of cartel
members to invite to bid on the refinery contracts, Barusco said in testimony
in the criminal case in Moro’s court. Araújo, now an executive in
Odebrecht’s industrial engineering division, denied through a
company-issued statement being part of a cartel or committing any
wrongdoing. “Odebrecht vehemently denies allegations made by a confessed
criminal,” the company said.
Within two months, Barusco signed a plan to seek bids on 12 packages
of contracts, which were later awarded to the companies in the alleged
cartel. Central to the scheme were the alleged cartel’s partners inside
Petrobras. They charged builders kickbacks of up to 3 percent for the
right to fix a contract, Costa and other witnesses testified. The graft,
they said, was divided among three political parties and the executives
themselves, via payments funneled through Alberto Youssef and other
intermediaries.
Soon, government auditors began warning that contractors were vastly
overcharging for Abreu e Lima. That brought the matter to Homero de
Souza’s tiny cubicle in the Consultancy, congress’s in-house auditing
arm in the labyrinthine legislative annex in Brasília. Souza, a senior
Consultancy auditor, recommended that congress block funding for the
project. “It was so obvious, this pattern of theft,” says Souza. “I’d
never seen anything on the scale of Abreu e Lima.” Congress’s Irregular
Works Committee recommended excising the refinery from the 2010 federal
budget, effectively halting work, and congress voted to approve. Lula
vetoed the recommendation, assuring Petrobras the funding it needed to
pay the builders to forge ahead.
The refinery rose at a time when Brazil seemed to have no limits.
Record prices for oil, iron ore, soy, and other commodities exports; a
roaring currency that made consumer goods more affordable for the
growing middle class; and plummeting interest rates were fueling a boom
that almost tripled the size of the economy during the Lula years. A
wildly successful welfare program pulled 40 million people out of
poverty.
By the time Lula turned over power to Rousseff, Brazil’s giddy boom
had fizzled, revealing a foundation built on good fortune (those high
commodities prices), corruption (including a vote-buying scandal that
reached up to Lula’s top political lieutenants), and a near-doubling of
the national debt, to $1.2 trillion. When Rousseff traveled north to
inaugurate Abreu e Lima, in December 2013, there was little to
celebrate. The refinery had cost Petrobras $18.5 billion, eight times
the original budget. Instead of policing the project, Rousseff failed to
disrupt what might be one of Brazil’s biggest single cases of
corruption ever.
Abreu e Lima in 2014
Paulo Fridman/Corbis
Rousseff says she knew nothing about the alleged
cartel scheme. “This isn’t an issue of management, pure and simple. The
Petrobras board was comprised of very qualified businesspeople,”
Rousseff told Bloomberg in April in a one-hour interview at Planalto,
the presidential palace in Brasília. “None of us even saw a sign.
Everything points to a cartel and the corruption of some employees.”
Maria das Gracas Foster, an old friend of Rousseff’s who became CEO
of Petrobras in 2012, has also said she didn’t know what was going on.
Late last year, Foster launched a massive investigation. She also
temporarily banned more than 20 companies being probed in the scandal
from doing business with the company; that led directly to three big
builders—Galvão Engenharia, Grupo Schahin, and OAS—filing for
bankruptcy. In February, Rousseff forced out Foster, along with all of
her top management.
Under its new CEO, Aldemir Bendine, Petrobras is seeking
reimbursement for damages from the companies in the alleged cartel. It
is also, it says, establishing a new compliance, governance, and risk
division. “We are embarrassed,” Bendine said on April 23. “We are
cleaning up mistakes.”
The scandal has all but crippled the company. In February, Moody’s
Investors Service chopped its credit rating to junk. In April, Petrobras
took charges of 44.6 billion reais, most for overpriced and unfinished
refineries that were the target of the alleged builders’ cartel. The
writedown caused a 21.6-billion-real loss for 2014. Bendine is trying to
sell $13.7 billion of assets to raise cash. It’s a stunning change of
fortune from the Lula heyday, in 2010, when Petrobras raised a whopping
$70 billion by selling stock to investors.
Everyone in Brazil knows the Portuguese term for the inefficiencies that hold back the economy: custo Brasil,
or Brazil cost. When it comes to the ease of starting a business,
Brazil fell seven spots this year to 167th in the world, behind Uganda,
according to the World Bank.
Corruption will cost the economy as much as 120 billion reais this
year, says José Ricardo Roriz Coelho, competitiveness director at Fiesp,
the country’s biggest industrial association.
An increasingly independent judicial branch may finally stop the
alleged Petrobras cartel from driving up costs and siphoning funds from
the investments the country sorely needs to compete, but the damage it
caused won’t be undone quickly. And the problem goes beyond Petrobras.
Last year, the Brazilian antitrust regulator fined cement makers 3.1
billion reais for operating a cartel for years. Recently, the regulator
launched investigations into cartels that may have rigged the market for
school supplies and medicine. The custo Brasil is growing harder and
harder to bear.
A protest outside Petrobras headquarters in Rio de Janeiro
Ale Silva/Demotix/Corbis
This story appears in the June 2015 issue of Bloomberg Markets.
With assistance from Anna Edgerton in Brasilia; David Biller, Yasmine
Batista, and Peter Millard in Rio de Janeiro; and Francisco Marcelino in
São Paulo.""
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