A former official fires a legal missile at Mexico's political class
Emilio Lozoyas explosive allegations of corruption will test the countrys institutions, and its president
Aug 29th 2020 edition
One of the rituals of Mexican politics is for a president to begin his term by locking up a supposed miscreant from the previous administration. Four of the six presidents from 1982 to 2018 did that. They incarcerated two union leaders, a former presidents brother and the head of Pemex, the state oil company. They presented these as giant victories in the fight against corruption. But they were not. Two of the jailbirds were acquitted, one was pardoned and the sentence of the fourth was overturned. Corruption continued to be rampant, uninvestigated and unpunished.
Many Mexicans regard the administration of Enrique Peña Nieto, which governed until December 2018, as the most corrupt in history. Rosario Robles, a minister in his government, is suspected of helping to siphon off $400m of the governments money through ghost companies and has spent the past year in preventive detention. A construction firm with government contracts helped Mr Peñas wife acquire a house worth $7m.
Those scandals helped Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a left-wing populist, win the presidential election in 2018 in a landslide. Mr López Obrador, often called amlo, portrays himself as incorruptible and promises to eliminate, not reduce graft. Like past presidents, he has sought out wrongdoers from earlier administrations.
Last year, at the request of the attorney-general, a judge issued an arrest warrant for Emilio Lozoya, who was international-affairs co-ordinator for Mr Peñas campaign and the boss of Pemex from 2012 to 2016. He returned from Spain in July this year.
More:
https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2020/08/29/a-former-official-fires-a-legal-missile-at-mexicos-political-class