Business against corruption International review

New Venezuela oil chief vows anti-corruption crusade

Venezuela’s president has named Maj. Gen. Manuel Quevedo, right, to lead the state-owned energy company and the oil ministry. Source: Meridith Kohut for The New York Times.

This material belongs to: Reuters.

CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuela’s new oil czar vowed on Tuesday to root out corruption in state oil company PDVSA in a combative two-minute speech during his inauguration, without offering clues as to how he plans to handle the company’s crippling debt burden.

President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday tapped Major General Manuel Quevedo to lead both PDVSA [PDVSA.UL] and the Oil Ministry, giving the already powerful military control of the OPEC nation’s dominant industry.

In comments during a two-hour broadcast by Maduro, Quevedo said he would go after “saboteurs” and defeat a “corrupt bureaucracy,” while offering only a brief nod to boosting oil production and improving refinery operations.

“We’re going to clean up public finances so that those thieves in PDVSA will finally leave,” said Quevedo. “The government’s actions have captured many people who had infiltrated the industry. Those who are left should be worried.”

Investors are closely watching Quevedo for clues as to whether he will seek to halt payment on PDVSA’s bonds, or maintain Maduro’s strategy of continuing to service debt despite the country’s crippling economic crisis.

Quevedo made no mention of foreign debt on Tuesday. Maduro said this month he would restructure and refinance all future debt payments and that the country would never default on its debt.

Quevedo’s predecessors, Oil Minister Eulogio del Pino and PDVSA President Nelson Martinez, were both seen as a industry veterans with significant technical expertise who favored continuing to make debt payments.

Sources in the sector said Quevedo’s appointment could quicken a white-collar exodus from PDVSA and worsen operational problems at a time when production has already tumbled to near 30-year lows of under 2 million barrels a day.

Maduro said on Tuesday he was naming Ysmel Serrano, the head of the trade and supply division, as vice president of PDVSA, which oversees the world’s largest crude reserves. He said he would seek to name the country’s former energy minister, Ali Rodriguez, as “honorary president” of PDVSA.

More military officers are set to be named to senior management posts as part of a shake-up the government says is aimed at fighting corruption, two company sources told Reuters on Monday.

President Maduro Demands an End to Corruption in PDVSA

This material belongs to: teleSUR.

The Venezuelan leader announced a deep revolution of PDVSA to end corruption and turn it into a productive company at the service of the people.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro demanded on Tuesday an end to corruption, given the numerous arrests for irregularities within the state-owned company Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) and its subsidiary Citgo, in the United States.

During a meeting held with oil workers, at the headquarters of PDVSA, in La Campiña, Caracas, the president said that the anti-corruption operation aims to turn the oil company into a power at the service of the nation’s economic development.

“November 27 is the starting point for the new stage of transformation of PDVSA,” he said, emphasizing that “the time has come for a great clean up in PDVSA together with the working class, together with the FANB (Bolivarian National Armed Forces) and with the people “.

“They forgot that the only owner of the oil industry is called: the people, noble and sovereign of Venezuela,” said the head of state.

At the beginning of the event, President Maduro announced that he had appointed as vice president of PDVSA, the lawyer and political scientist Ysmel Serrano, who, along with the new president of the company, Manuel Quevedo, will be sworn in on Tuesday.

President Nicolás Maduro denounced that the government of the United States was behind a “silent stoppage” of the oil industry, which would be executed with the complicity of the mafias within PDVSA.

In addition, he assured that his government possesses the evidence of how corruption mafias emerged within the oil sector.

“I authorize the Executive Vice President (Tarek El Aissami) to explain to the country all the evidence we have against this pile of mobsters and bandits who believed that PDVSA belonged to them,” he said.