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Paraguay Vice President Resigns After US Sanctions

Paraguay's Vice President Hugo Velazquez announced his resignation Friday and pulled out of the running for next year's presidential election after he was sanctioned by Washington for "significant corruption."


In this file photo taken on April 05, 2017 Paraguayan deputy Hugo Velazquez speaks next to the president of the Paraguayan Senate Robert Acevedo (out of frame), during a press conference after attending a roundtable regarding the suspended re-election controversial bill that led to violent riots during last weekend, at the Metropolitan Seminary in Asuncion. The United States government has accused Paraguayan Vice-President Hugo Velazquez of “significant corruption” and denied him access to a visa to enter the country, the head of US diplomacy, Antony Blinken, announced on August 12, 2022. (Photo by NORBERTO DUARTE / AFP)
In this file photo taken on April 05, 2017, Paraguayan deputy Hugo Velazquez speaks next to the president of the Paraguayan Senate Robert Acevedo (out of frame), during a press conference after attending a roundtable regarding the suspended re-election controversial bill that led to violent riots during last weekend, at the Metropolitan Seminary in Asuncion. (Photo by NORBERTO DUARTE / AFP)

 

Paraguay’s Vice President Hugo Velazquez announced his resignation Friday and pulled out of the running for next year’s presidential election after he was sanctioned by Washington for “significant corruption.”

The US State Department had earlier released a statement from Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Velazquez would be barred from entering the United States due to his “involvement in significant corruption, including bribery of a public official and interference in public processes.”

Velazquez was hoping to stand for election next year as Paraguay’s presidents — including the current leader Mario Abdo Benitez — are limited to a single five-year term.

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“The decision to step aside is to not affect the president” or their Colorado Party, Velazquez told 1080 AM radio station.

“I am retiring from politics. It was the last stage of my career. If it couldn’t happen, what are we to do?”

Several family members were also sanctioned, as well as Juan Carlos Duarte, a close friend, and legal adviser to the company that runs the major Yacyreta hydroelectric power station.

Velazquez denied the US allegations and insisted he has “a clean conscience.”

He had been a candidate for the ruling Colorado Party’s December primaries ahead of next year’s election.

The US sanctions relate to Duarte offering “a bribe to a Paraguayan public official in order to obstruct an investigation that threatened the vice president and his financial interests,” said Blinken.

AFP