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Ecuador seizes Brazilian Odebrecht assets and demands compensation

by rahul | September 24, 2008 at 04:05 am | 121 views | 1 comment | 0 recommendations
 

President Rafael Correa of Ecuador has ordered troops to seize the assets of a major Brazilian construction company.  The move follows a dispute over the country's second largest dam, which was built by the Odebrecht company but shut down just a year after it was opened.  The government says this was due to construction faults and is demanding large sums in compensation. A deal was believed to have been reached, so it is not clear what led to the move, say correspondents. President Correa issued a presidential decree ordering the requisition of Odebrecht's assets and dispatching troops to take over the company's projects. A national emergency was being declared, the decree said, to recover the operational capacity of the San Francisco hydroelectric dam and to avoid internal unrest as a result of power blackouts across the country. Odebrecht's assets, amounting to around $800m (£431m), include a small regional airport, two hydro-electric plants and a rural irrigation project.

Four officials of the company have been banned from leaving Ecuador.

'Reasonable offers':  Ecuadorian press reports last week had suggested that the parties had reached an agreement on a compensation package amounting to nearly $30m (£16.2m).  Odebrecht was reported to have agreed to meet the cost of repairing the faults in the dam, so it is not clear what prompted this latest action, says the BBC's Tim Hirsch in Sao Paulo.   Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said he understood the company had made offers to Ecuador which were "reasonable to us, at least at first sight".

Speaking on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, Mr Amorim said he believed Odebrecht was "a great company" but that Brazil could not "prejudge complaints by the government of Ecuador".  Mr Correa is widely expected to win a referendum on a new constitution under which the president would have greater control of Ecuador's economy.  Mr Correa says the reforms will tackle political instability and make Ecuador a more just society.  But critics say they will focus more power in the president's hands. 

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Luiz Castro

Odebrecht is a privated owned company, they should know that Ecuador is not a safe harbour for investments.

The most interesting point on this article is that a President of a country has to sign a decree, sending troops and seizing assets because of a malfunction in a project. That shows how week are the judicial system on these new leftist Latin American utopias.

 It is funny to see a president seazing butchers, milk companies, banks, dams and oil companies. There is no legal system : "L'État, c'est moi".

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September 24, 2008 at 04:05 am by rahul, 121 views, 1 comment

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