File Photo of Guatemala's President Otto Perez. (AFP Photo)
Guatemala City:
A judge issued an arrest warrant Wednesday for Guatemala's President Otto Perez, who faces prosecution for allegedly masterminding a huge fraud scheme, a prosecutor said, a day after he was stripped of his immunity.
"The arrest warrant for the president has now been issued" by Judge Miguel Angel Galvez, who is in charge of the investigation, said Julia Barrera, spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office.
Under Guatemalan law, Perez will be automatically removed from office if remanded in custody by a criminal court.
But earlier in the day the president's counsel filed a document saying Perez will cooperate with authorities, allowing the leader to appear before a judge freely without being taken into custody by force.
After hearing the announcement, Perez's attorney told AFP the president would present himself Thursday to cooperate with investigations.
The president is able to stay in power even if he loses his immunity and is subject to criminal proceedings so long as he is not taken into custody.
Guatemala's attorney general also said Wednesday she is confident embattled Perez will be convicted of corruption, as the country's top court rejected his challenge to prosecutors' moves to try him.
The conservative leader is against the ropes after Congress voted unanimously Tuesday to strip him of his immunity, clearing the way for prosecutors to go ahead with their case against him.
Investigators accuse Perez of running a scheme in which businesses paid bribes to dodge taxes on their imports, defrauding the country of millions of dollars.
"There's a criminal case and we will go to trial and then a verdict. In my opinion and based on what I know of the case, it will have to be a conviction," Attorney General Thelma Aldana told AFP.
"At this time we have complete freedom to investigate whatever line of inquiry we deem pertinent in the president's case," said Aldana, who was appointed by Perez.
If Perez is removed from power he would be replaced by new Vice President Alejandro Maldonado.
The president meanwhile failed in his bid to block the prosecutors' investigation as the Constitutional Court ruled against two motions filed by his lawyers.
The five-judge court said it had ruled unanimously not to grant the petitions -- one challenging the Supreme Court of Justice's decision to allow prosecutors to open a criminal investigation, the other challenging the legality of the congressional investigative committee that subsequently recommended lifting his immunity.
'The Line'
Perez is the first president in the Central American country's history to be stripped of his immunity, a decision that caused exasperated Guatemalans to burst into celebration Tuesday night after months of unprecedented protests.
A judge subsequently barred the 64-year-old retired general from leaving the country.
Investigators say their accusations are based on some 89,000 wire-tapped phone calls that uncovered a scheme called "La Linea" (the line), named for a hotline businesses would call to access corrupt officials and get illegal discounts on their customs duties.
Perez has repeatedly denied involvement and rejected calls from the increasingly virulent protest movement for his resignation.
The scandal, which has already felled his former vice president and a string of top officials, comes as Guatemala prepares for elections Sunday to choose his successor.
Perez, in power since 2012, is constitutionally barred from running for re-election. His term ends on January 14.
The president has been left increasingly isolated by the scandal.
Six of his 14 ministers have resigned in recent days, along with several other top officials.
"The arrest warrant for the president has now been issued" by Judge Miguel Angel Galvez, who is in charge of the investigation, said Julia Barrera, spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office.
Under Guatemalan law, Perez will be automatically removed from office if remanded in custody by a criminal court.
But earlier in the day the president's counsel filed a document saying Perez will cooperate with authorities, allowing the leader to appear before a judge freely without being taken into custody by force.
After hearing the announcement, Perez's attorney told AFP the president would present himself Thursday to cooperate with investigations.
The president is able to stay in power even if he loses his immunity and is subject to criminal proceedings so long as he is not taken into custody.
Guatemala's attorney general also said Wednesday she is confident embattled Perez will be convicted of corruption, as the country's top court rejected his challenge to prosecutors' moves to try him.
The conservative leader is against the ropes after Congress voted unanimously Tuesday to strip him of his immunity, clearing the way for prosecutors to go ahead with their case against him.
Investigators accuse Perez of running a scheme in which businesses paid bribes to dodge taxes on their imports, defrauding the country of millions of dollars.
"There's a criminal case and we will go to trial and then a verdict. In my opinion and based on what I know of the case, it will have to be a conviction," Attorney General Thelma Aldana told AFP.
"At this time we have complete freedom to investigate whatever line of inquiry we deem pertinent in the president's case," said Aldana, who was appointed by Perez.
If Perez is removed from power he would be replaced by new Vice President Alejandro Maldonado.
The president meanwhile failed in his bid to block the prosecutors' investigation as the Constitutional Court ruled against two motions filed by his lawyers.
The five-judge court said it had ruled unanimously not to grant the petitions -- one challenging the Supreme Court of Justice's decision to allow prosecutors to open a criminal investigation, the other challenging the legality of the congressional investigative committee that subsequently recommended lifting his immunity.
'The Line'
Perez is the first president in the Central American country's history to be stripped of his immunity, a decision that caused exasperated Guatemalans to burst into celebration Tuesday night after months of unprecedented protests.
A judge subsequently barred the 64-year-old retired general from leaving the country.
Investigators say their accusations are based on some 89,000 wire-tapped phone calls that uncovered a scheme called "La Linea" (the line), named for a hotline businesses would call to access corrupt officials and get illegal discounts on their customs duties.
Perez has repeatedly denied involvement and rejected calls from the increasingly virulent protest movement for his resignation.
The scandal, which has already felled his former vice president and a string of top officials, comes as Guatemala prepares for elections Sunday to choose his successor.
Perez, in power since 2012, is constitutionally barred from running for re-election. His term ends on January 14.
The president has been left increasingly isolated by the scandal.
Six of his 14 ministers have resigned in recent days, along with several other top officials.
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