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Mexico minister bought home from scandal-hit government contractor
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Mexico’s finance minister reportedly bought a home from a government contractor at the centre of a conflict-of-interest scandal embroiling President Enrique Peña Nieto and his administration.
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Property records show the minister, Luis Videgaray, bought the house at an exclusive golf resort outside the town of Malinalco in the central State of Mexico from Bienes Raices H&G SA, the Wall Street Journal said.
The firm, commercial records show, is owned by Juan Armando Hinojosa, whose companies have won hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of public works projects during Peña Nieto’s time as governor of the State of Mexico and during his current administration, the report said.
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Videgaray, in a letter released by his ministry late on Thursday, said there was no conflict of interest. The purchase of the home was made in October 2012, before he held public office, and was within “market parameters”, he said.
“I categorically reiterate that I am absolutely convinced I have acted honestly and in full compliance with the law,” Videgaray said in the statement.
He added he’d taken out a mortgage for the home from the company itself, and that he paid off the full amount in January 2014 for “financial reasons”.
Last month the government abruptly canceled a $3.75bn (£2.25bn) high-speed rail contract that had been awarded to a consortium led by China Railway Construction Corp Ltd, partnered with a group of Mexican firms including a unit of Hinojosa’s Grupo Higa.
It was later revealed a subsidiary of Grupo Higa owned another luxury house that Peña Nieto’s wife, Angelica Rivera, was in the process of acquiring, raising questions about the tender and prompting her to announce she would give up the house.