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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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Mostrando postagens com marcador partido mafioso. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador partido mafioso. Mostrar todas as postagens

terça-feira, 12 de agosto de 2014

Petrobras: a destruicao companheira e o futuro perdido...

Petrobras : tarred by corruption
 Financial Times, 11.8.2014

An investigation into the state oil company has tarnished political reputations

After years of allegedly secret dealings, the men at the centre of what is potentially Brazil’s biggest corruption case made a careless mistake.
In May 2013, convicted black market money dealer Alberto Youssef bought through third parties a luxury car for his friend and alleged accomplice, Paulo Roberto Costa, a former executive at state-oil company Petrobras.
But while negotiating the purchase of the R$250,000 ($110,000) Range Rover Evoque in São Paulo, they put their names together on a seemingly harm­less document: a proof of ad­dress. It was the only occasion in the mountains of police investigation documents seen by the Financial Times they voluntarily appeared together.
Federal police swooped. They raided the home of Mr Costa, confiscating the Evoque and more than half a million dollars of cash. Prosecutors allege that the wider extent of corruption that affects Petrobras, including bribes and underhand political donations, amounts to more than R$1bn in inflated contracts. In the process, the police helped throw open Brazil’s October election, turning it from what looked like a one-horse race for President Dilma Rousseff to the closest contest in recent history. As the former chairwoman of Petrobras, the claims threaten Ms Rousseff’s reputation as a capable technocrat. Prosecutors allege the company was used for extensive political donations.
A task force of federal public prosecutors in the state of Paraná, which is leading the probe, said: “The suspects . . . converted R$250,000 ex­tracted from corruption and abuse of public office at Petrobras into a legitimate asset through the purchase of the Land Rover.”
Mr Youssef’s lawyers said the vehicle purchase was not illegal and Mr Costa’s lawyers added that the vehicle was payment for bona fide consultancy services provided to Mr Youssef. Both men are in custody facing charges of money laundering, corruption and abuse of public office.
Brazilians are appalled at accusations that criminals had infiltrated Petrobras, their country’s biggest company, a national icon and a global leader in ultra deepwater oil exploration. The company reported net profit last year of R$23.6bn with production of 2.54m barrels of oil equivalent a day. Petrobras is seen as so important that both the lower house and the Senate have launched inquiries.
“This scandal has contributed greatly to the fall in the popularity of the president,” says Senator Álvaro Dias, of the opposition PSDB, who is participating in one of the congressional inquiries into the case. The president’s approval rating has fallen from above 60 per cent early last year to less than 40 per cent. ButMs Rousseff’s ruling Workers’ party (PT) dismisses claims that Petrobras’s problems have damaged her chances of winning a second term, saying the president has been cleared of any wrongdoing in the scandals.
Beyond party politics, however, the controversy has highlighted what analysts say is a dangerous flaw in Brazil’s national institutions: the ease with which politicians are able to use state companies as a source of illicit campaign funds. “The truth is most parties try to use state-owned enterprises for their benefit,” said Sérgio Lazzarini, a professor at business school, Insper, in São Paulo.
Petrobras share price
The Petrobras project at the centre of the scandal involving Mr Costa and Mr Youssef is a refinery near Abreu e Lima in north-eastern Brazil.
A square in the small town features two statues, one honouring José Inácio de Abreu e Lima, a revolutionary who left Recife and fought for independence in Venezuela and Colombia. The other is of the Venezuelan general Simón Bolívar, his comrade and another of the continent’s independence heroes. “I guess one must be Abreu and the other is Lima,” says Francisco de Oliveira, a 21-year-old bricklayer, leaning on the monument.
But if the town’s residents seem oblivious to the Brazilian freedom fighter, the Petrobras refinery project has also done little to honour his memory. Envisioned as a partnership between Brazil and Venezuela, the project has become the focus of a police investigation into money laundering, known as Lava Jato, or “Jumbo Wash”, in which Mr Youssef and Mr Costa have been implicated.
In 2006, when the project began construction, former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Ms Rousseff’s predecessor and mentor, was pictured with the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez shaking hands at the site. The refinery was meant to be a business joint venture that would process Venezuela’s heavy crude. But Caracas never put a cent into it: even the anti-capitalist Chávez was put off by its escalating costs, former Petrobras executives joke.
From an original budget of $2.5bn, the cost of the 230,000 barrels-a-day refinery soared to $20bn, or $87,000 per barrel of refining capacity. This makes it one of the most expensive ever built, analysts say. The international average cost is between $13,000 and $39,000, according to an estimate from Credit Suisse.
Although a listed company, Petrobras has always been politicised. But oil executives say Mr Lula da Silva and his allies deepened the practice, assigning a larger number of senior positions to political appointees, from the former chief executive José Sergio Gabrielli, a PT member, to Mr Costa, regarded as a representative of the pro-government Progressive party.
“The PT saw . . . that Petrobras could be a great instrument to preserve power,” says Adriano Pires, founder of the Brazilian Centre of Infrastructure, a research company.
The PT rejects such arguments, saying it is just opposition electioneering that irresponsibly taints the reputation of Petrobras. Mr Costa’s lawyer said while he might have had political support, he was a career Petrobras engineer appointed on merit.
It was also from around 2006 that Petrobras embarked on a series of transactions that are now the subject of corruption investigations. These include accusations that it overpaid for a refinery in Pasadena in the US, paying a sum 28 times greater than the original owner, Belgian company Astra, paid for it. Brazil’s TCU – or federal accounts watchdog – ordered the former board of Petrobras to return $792.3m to the company that it calculated as the losses from the $1.18bn Pasadena transaction.
But by far the biggest concern is the Abreu e Lima refinery. According to the prosecutors, the Lavo Jato investigation began as a probe into suspected money laundering by the late José Mohamed Janene, a PP politician. In the process, police discovered fraudulent transactions committed between 2009 and 2013, allegedly by Mr Youssef and Petrobras’s Mr Costa.
Police suspect Mr Youssef to be “the biggest doleiro in national history”, according to an investigation dossier, using the Portuguese term for black market money dealer. He was convicted for financial crimes in 2004.
Mr Costa was appointed Petrobras’ director of fuel supply in 2004 and became the executive responsible for refineries in 2008. Prosecution documents allege Mr Youssef, Mr Costa and conspirators hatched myriad shell company schemes to skim money from Petrobras and then “wash” it by sending it offshore.
“We have indications that Paulo Roberto [Mr Costa] transferred more than $400m offshore through foreign exchange contracts,” says public prosecutor Carlos Fernando Santos Lima.
The prosecution cites, as one example, findings by TCU that contracts awarded to one builder, identified as Consórcio Nacional Camargo Corrêa, were inflated in value by as much as R$446m. This company had in turn contracted two others, Sanko Sider and Sanko Serviços, to supply materials and services, paying them R$113m over four years.
These two, in turn, paid R$26m to an alleged shell company, MO Consultoria, controlled by Mr Youssef, and other undisclosed sums to another of his alleged shells, GFD. This money then allegedly made its way offshore.
CNCC told the FT in response to the allegations that it won its contracts through legitimate public tenders. It said it was co-operating with investigators. A spokesman for the Sanko companies said all transactions were legitimate and made through the conventional banking system. He added that the companies were assisting the investigation.
Prosecutors allege evidence seized from Mr Costa indicated he negotiated with Petrobras’s contractors to make political donations. They point to a document in which he wrote the names of six big Petrobras contractors that donated a total of R$35.3m to parties in the governing coalition during the 2010 election. Prosecutors allege the document could be “treated as a spreadsheet for possible campaign donations, in which Mr Costa acted as an intermediary for these contributions with companies that had contracts with Petrobras”.
Mr Costa’s lawyers said the prosecutors’ accusations against him are baseless “assumptions”. They also said there was no evidence of inflating of contracts. “The criteria adopted by the prosecution are contestable and this will become clear as the case progresses.” Mr Youseff also denies the allegations, his lawyers said.
PT politicians also said it was too early to draw conclusions about political donations. They said Petrobras’s problem is its commercial independence and ability to award contracts without the open tenders that would be required of a public ministry.
Congressman Marco Maia, who is leading a lower house congressional inquiry, said lawmakers would review Petrobras’s procurement processes to make them more accountable. “We will change the legislation and democratise the procurement and information-sharing process of Petrobras.”
At the Abreu e Lima refinery, rain clouds are clearing and workers trudge back through the thick red mud of the construction site. A cleaner says many workers “vanish as soon as it rains”, explaining the delays in the project.
Like the refinery project, mud from the Abreu e Lima scandal has splattered Ms Rousseff’s election campaign, damaging her reputation as a competent manager.
But analysts doubt that much of it will stick to her. She was recently cleared by the TCU of wrongdoing in the Pasadena scandal. She has also installed career Petrobras engineer, Maria das Graças Foster, as CEO, who has “cleaned out” most of the political appointees, former Petrobras executives say.
“Petrobras will continue to be a negative source of news for her during the election but the key risk factor for her is a weakening economy,” says João Augusto de Castro Neves of Eurasia Group, a consultancy.
More worrying for Brazil is the apparent propensity of state-owned companies to be used by politicians intent on financing their campaigns. Furnas, the federal power company, has also been embroiled in corruption allegations linked to the 2002 elections which the former managers of the company have previously denied.
A tougher anti-corruption law could help but enforcement will be vital. Brazil’s convoluted legal system often allows those with good lawyers to avoid jail. “This new law is a good thing but our track record of punishment is not very bright,” said Mr Lazzarini of Insper.
One man who seemed to understand the problem of endemic corruption was Mr Costa. In a notebook seized by police from his home, he jotted down a quote from Millôr Fernandes, the Brazilian writer, that captured the cynicism many feel about the country’s politics.
“Rooting out corruption is the ultimate goal of those who have not yet come to power,” he scrawled.

Additional reporting by Thalita Carrico

sexta-feira, 10 de janeiro de 2014

O Partido Milionario da Classe Operaria e as multas ridiculas contra os quadrilheiros: os militantes pagam...

Militantes de chinelo de dedo, como existem centenas de milhares, são como esses crentes de igrejas "tele-evangélicas" da teologia da prosperidade: eles doam, compulsoriamente quero dizer, dez por cento do que ganham para o partido, mês a mês.
Já os militantes de alto coturno, os apparatchiks que detêm cargos no governo maravilhoso que nos governa precisam doar, compulsoriamente, sempre, de 20 a 30 por cento (segundo o DAS, ou seja, cargo de confiança, já que a maioria não tem competência para ocupá-los) desses altos salários ao partido milionário da classe trabalhadora, que ainda organiza a extorsão dos capitalistas segundo métodos já conhecidos em Chicago quase 100 anos atrás...
Agora vão precisar reforçar a colheita, de todos os lados, de todos os contribuintes, compulsórios e "voluntários".
Tem algumas centenas de milhares de reais a pagar pelos quadrilheiros condenados.
É pouco, pelas dezenas, talvez centenas de milhões que foram colocados à disposição de obras mais elevadas...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Reinaldo Azevedo, 10/01/2014

José Genoino e sua buliçosa família começaram a me dar uma preguiiiça!!! Cheguei a me comover um pouquinho com Miruna, sua filha. Vislumbrei o amor de uma filha preocupada com seu pai. Bonito. Isso nada tem a ver com política. Agora não mais. Vejo na moça uma pré-candidata a alguma coisa. Parece ser a pessoa vocacionada para levar adiante o nome da família.
Ela é a principal porta-voz de um site criado para arrecadar dinheiro para pagar a multa a que o pai foi condenado pelo STF: R$ 667,5 mil. Genoino é o tal “homem pobre”, que “mora numa casa modesta há 30 anos”, que nunca fez política para “enriquecimento pessoal”.
Até parece que a única forma de cometer crimes é investir no… enriquecimento pessoal.
Não vou doar dinheiro, não. Genoino pode até ser pobre, mas seu partido é o mais rico do Brasil. Ele fez o que fez para o PT, certo? Que a legenda pague. Não é tanto dinheiro assim para uma estrutura multimilionária, né?
E por que essa presepada toda? Para continuar a alimentar a imagem do mártir e, intuo, conservar na política o DNA da família Genoino.

Está tentado a dar um dinheirinho para o petista, leitor amigo? Doe para uma criança pobre.

quarta-feira, 11 de dezembro de 2013

A frase da semana, do mes, do ano...

“É assim que essa gente age… como a Máfia, primeiro tentam desqualificar o denunciante, depois, partem para cooptá-lo, por fim, no desespero, partem para coisa pior…” 
Romeu Tuma Jr.
10/12/2013

quinta-feira, 21 de novembro de 2013

Privilegios nao compartilhados: petralhas zombam das familias dos demais prisioneiros

Degradante para um país e uma republica que se pretendem democraticos, e sobretudo para um partido que se pretende igualitário, ou seja, contra qualquer tipo de privilégios.
Por outro lado, devo entender por essas visitas que o governador de Brasilia e todos os parlamentares estão zombando do STF, do sistema penitenciário e se solidarizando com criminosos comuns. 
Se trata de um partido que concorda, acha normal e se deduca à prática de crimes, até piores do que os de bandidos comuns ( já que em escala "industrial"), à corrupção, ao roubo de ativos públicos enfim, toda sorte de falcatruas e de malversações?
Parece que sim...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

MP pede fim do privilégio de mensaleiros na Papuda

Trio petista preso na Papuda - Dirceu, Delúbio e Genoino - tem recebido visitas de familiares, amigos e parlamentares, contrariando as regras do presídio

Um grupo de 26 deputados do PT  visitam os condenados no processo do mensalão que estão cumprindo pena em regime semiaberto no Complexo da Papuda, em Brasília
PUXADINHO - Um grupo de 26 deputados do PT  visita os condenados no processo do mensalão que estão cumprindo pena no Complexo da Papuda, em Brasília (Marcello Casal Jr/ABr)
O Ministério Público do Distrito Federal e Territórios (MPDFT) enviou nesta quinta-feira uma recomendação à diretoria do Sistema Penitenciário do Distrito Federal para que seja seguido o princípio da isonomia no tratamento aos internos e visitantes das unidades prisionais. Apesar de não citar os nomes dos mensaleiros, é uma manifestação direta contra os privilégios que os petistas José Dirceu, Delúbio Soares e José Genoino estão recebendo, com visitas frequentes de amigos, familiares e parlamentares do PT.
A Promotoria de Justiça de Execuções Penais do MPDFT relatou, no documento, as informações dos veículos de comunicação sobre o entra e sai de visitantes nos últimos dias. Nesta quinta-feira, Genoino passou mal e foi levado a um hospital, onde permanece em tratamento - ele foi submetido recentemente a uma cirurgia cardíaca.
A Promotoria lembrou que o horário de visitação do presídio é restrito às quartas e quintas-feiras, das 9h às 15h, além de destacar que os visitantes devem passar por revista, estar com roupa apropriada e deixar aparelhos eletrônicos na entrada. O acesso irrestrito aos parlamentares, fora dos horários estabelecidos, é um entendimento do juiz da Vara de Execuções Penais, que pode ser suspenso a qualquer momento.
Dirceu e Delúbio desistiram de pedir transferência para uma unidade em São Paulo e permanecerão em Brasília, onde o sistema prisional é administrado pelo governador do Distrito Federal e colega de partido, Agnelo Queiroz. O governador, aliás, fez questão de visitar os detentos petistas ontem ao lado de 26 deputados. Nesta quinta, essa rotina de visitas teve seguimento: um grupo de oito senadores e três deputados petistas estiveram na Papuda.
(Com Estadão Conteúdo)
Os senadores, Eduardo Suplicy, Humberto Costa e Wellington Dias, visitam os condenados no processo do mensalão que estão cumprindo pena em regime semiaberto no Complexo da Papuda, em Brasília
Os senadores, Eduardo Suplicy, Humberto Costa e Wellington Dias, visitam os condenados no processo do mensalão que estão cumprindo pena em regime semiaberto no Complexo da Papuda, em Brasília - Marcello Casal Jr/ABr