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Politics

Guatemala court clears way for probe against president

September 4, 2017

The Supreme Court in Guatemala has ruled that President Jimmy Morales may be investigated for alleged illegal campaign financing. The country's Congress will now have the final say on whether his immunity is removed.

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Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales
Image: picture-alliance/MAXPPP/dpa/L. Tanguy

A request from Guatemalan prosecutors to lift President Jimmy Morales' immunity was granted by the country's Supreme Court on Monday.

"There appears to be sufficient evidence to allow the transfer of the case to congress," Supreme Court spokesman Angel Pineda said.

Guatemalan President elect Jimmy Morales(R) shakes hands with Ivan Velasquez, the Head of the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala
Morales (R) sought to expel Velasquez (L) after he announced a campaign finance probe into the presidentImage: Getty Images/J.Ordonez

The request now passes to Congress for a final decision. The Central American country's lawmakers must now form a five-member committee to examine the case against Morales and present their results to the rest of Congress.

In order to strip Morales of his immunity from prosecution, a two-thirds majority is needed in Congress. Afterwards, the president could be formally investigated and charged.

Suspect campaign financing

Last week, Guatemala's top court delivered another blow to Morales when they overruled his order to expel Ivan Velasquez, the head of an UN-backed anti-corruption commission in Guatemala.

Velasquez and chief prosecutor Thelma Adana announced they were seeking to have Morales' immunity lifted. Two days later, Morales ordered Velasquez's immediate expulsion from the country.

Morales is suspected of failing to declare over $800,000 (672,000 euros) in electoral campaign funds. The president has denied any wrongdoing.

The UN anti-graft body and local prosecutors have gained popularity in Guatemala over the past decade, garnering respect for tackling corruption as well as helping force the country's previous president, Otto Perez Molina, from office two years ago.

Morales was elected as a successor in 2015 based on campaign promises to clean up Guatemala's endemic corruption.

rs/bw (AP, Reuters)

Guatemala's president expels anti-graft chief