IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
Image: Sebastián Piñera
The President of Chile, Sebastián Piñera leaves 10 Downing Street after meeting with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Sept. 10, 2021 in London, England.Dan Kitwood / Getty Images file

Chile’s Piñera faces impeachment bid after Pandora Papers leak

Documents appear to outline a deal involving the 2010 sale of the Dominga mine, a sprawling copper and iron project during Piñera's first year in office.

By

SANTIAGO — Chilean opposition lawmakers launched impeachment proceedings against President Sebastián Piñera on Wednesday over possible irregularities in the sale of a mining company, after new details emerged about the deal in the Pandora Papers leak.

The move comes after Chile’s public prosecutor said this month it would open an investigation into possible bribery-related corruption charges as well as tax violations related to the sale. read more

The Pandora Papers are a cache of leaked documents that The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists says reveal offshore transactions involving global political and business figures.

Among them are documents that appear to outline a deal involving the 2010 sale of the Dominga mine, a sprawling copper and iron project in Chile. At the time, Piñera, a billionaire businessman, was in his first year of his first term in office.

The leak stirred controversy in Chile because it suggested the deal, which involved a firm linked to Piñera’s family, was contingent on a favorable regulatory environment. The sale had previously been examined and dismissed by courts in 2017.

Leftist lower house lawmaker Jaime Naranjo, one of the drivers of the impeachment proceeding, said Piñera had “openly infringed the Constitution... seriously compromising the honor of the nation”.

Piñera has rejected the accusations and argued that all the details of the contract were in the file already reviewed and that no irregularities were found.

The controversy comes ahead of presidential and legislative elections in November, with leftist parties appearing to be in the driving seat. Piñera is not a candidate in those elections.

The impeachment process would need 78 votes in the lower Chamber of Deputies to move forward, though it’s not clear if it would make it through the Senate.

Follow NBC News Latino on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.