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Reuters
Reuters
Politics

Paraguay VP Velazquez to quit after U.S. accuses him of corruption

FILE PHOTO: Paraguay's Vice-President Hugo Velazquez addresses the media after Foreign Minister Antonio Rivas took office in Asuncion,Paraguay July 31, 2019. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno

Paraguayan Vice President Hugo Velazquez on Friday said he would resign and withdraw his candidacy for the presidency, after being blacklisted by the United States for alleged "significant" acts of corruption.

Velazquez denied the accusation but said that, to "protect" his party, he would submit his resignation next week.

"I speak with the calm that my behavior gives me, because I did not do what they are accusing me of," he told local radio station Monumental. "I am speaking with a clear conscience."

FILE PHOTO: Hugo Velazquez, President of the Lower House of Congress, talks to the press before a session in Asuncion, Paraguay April 26, 2017. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno/File Photo

The U.S. State Department accused Velazquez earlier on Friday of involvement in significant acts of corruption.

A statement from U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Valazquez' associate Juan Carlos Duarte had offered a bribe to a Paraguayan public official to "obstruct an investigation that threatened the Vice President and his financial interests."

The offered bribe was above $1 million, the U.S. ambassador to Paraguay, Marc Ostfield, said in a statement.

Duarte said he had resigned and would cooperate with authorities, but did not comment directly on the accusations.

"It surprises me. I'm going to make myself available to them (and) ask for the relevant information," he told Reuters, adding that he had resigned because "it is a public position and I have to honor the institutions."

Velazquez and Duarte's immediate family members were also blacklisted in Blinken's statement.

The state department in July accused former Paraguayan President Horacio Cartes of "significant corruption" and of obstructing a cross-border criminal investigation.

He dismissed the accusations at the time as "unfounded and unjust."

(Reporting by Daniela Desantis and Paul Grant; Writing by Isabel Woodford, editing by Ismail Shakil and John Stonestreet)

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