Guatemalan President Otto Perez appeared before court on Thursday and
heard corruption charges against him, hours after filing his
resignation letter to Congress.
Perez has been charged with
criminal association, corruption and fraud in connection with a ring
that specialised in bringing items into the country and helping
companies avoid millions of dollars in customs fee in exchange for
bribes.
"I decided to undergo due process. My decision was to go to the courts, so here we are," Perez told reporters as he arrived.
"There are processes that we need to comply with," he said.
Guatemalan
prosecutors and a UN commission believe Perez led the group, which they
think was active "at least from May 2014 until April 2015". Perez
denies the charges.
"I am innocent, and we hope to defend
ourselves from the accusations, so justice may prevail," Perez said as
he arrived in court.
Perez filed his resignation on Wednesday
after a judge issued an arrest warrant against him. The Guatemalan
Congress was scheduled to meet later on Thursday to debate the
resignation.
Legislators are expected to accept it and call upon Vice President Alejandro Maldonado to become head of state.
Former
vice president Roxana Baldetti resigned in May when details of the
growing scandal came to light. She was arrested on August 21 and put in
jail for the duration of her trial.
Guatemalans elect a new president on Sunday. Perez's mandate runs until January.
The
corruption network was known as La Linea, named for a telephone hotline
used in the operation. Importers were allowed to avoid customs duties
in exchange for paying bribes that were distributed among the officials
involved, prosecutors said.
Guatemalans gathered on Thursday on the central Plaza de la Constitucion in Guatemala City to celebrate Perez's resignation.
"Yes we could, yes we could," people shouted as they waved flags and blew whistles.
Rigoberta
Menchu, an activist for the rights of indigenous communities who was
awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1992, celebrated the resignation as
a triumph for Guatemalan society.
"We cannot say that this was brought about by a handful of Guatemalans," Menchu told Guatemalan TV station Guatevision.
Friday, September 04, 2015
Guatemalan president charged with corruption
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