By Jon Shelton, LIMA Peru
A Peruvian court on Tuesday sentenced former president Ollanta Humala and his wife, Nadine Heredia, to 15 years in prison for money laundering on Tuesday.
Humala received the funds from
the Brazilian
construction giant Odebrecht and is said to have used them to
finance his 2006 and 2011 presidential campaigns, among other things.
Judges at the National
Superior Court said Humala and Heredia had accepted several million dollars in
illicit contributions from both Odebrecht, which was the subject of a massive
corruption case that reached the very top of the Brazilian and other Latin
American governments, and Venezuela's former
President Hugo Chavez.
Though Humala was unsuccessful
in his first bid to lead the country in 2006, he won the country's top job in
2011.
Humal joins a long list of
jailed former Peruvian presidents.
Last October, Alejandro
Toledo (2001-2006) was sentenced to 20 years and six months in
jail on corruption charges and both Pedro
Pablo Kuczynski (2016-2018) and Martin Vizcarra (2018-2020) are
currently under investigation.
Ex-President Alan
Garcia (1985-1990, 2006-2011) committed suicide in 2019 when authorities
arrived to arrest him on corruption charges.
Former President Pedro
Castillo (2021-2022) is currently on trial for an attempted coup, and Alberto
Fujimori (1990-2000) was convicted of various corruption and human rights
abuses.
The sentencing of Humala and
Heredia marks the latest chapter in the ongoing
saga of Odebrecht (now renamed Novonor), one of the biggest
construction companies in the world.
The company admitted in 2016
that it had doled out more than $29 million (€26 million) in bribes to Peruvian
politicians alone between 2005 and 2016.
Initial investigations against
Humala began in 2015, before Odebrecht's
revelation rocked governments across South America.
Though Humala was the first
former president to go on trial for ties to Odebrecht in 2022,
other prominent politicians and former state governors are currently under
investigation.
Humala and Heredia, who were
convicted alongside eight other defendants, were also accused of having
"concealed real estate purchases" made with some of the roughly
$3 million they received in illegal funds.
The 62-year-old Humala said he would appeal the court's ruling.
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