sesamosinsal
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On Ciccone, it's completely politics. My summary of the events goes as this: AFIP declared Ciccone bankrupt in 2010. In August of that year, an Argentine court rents out the Ciccone facilities to a company by the name of Boldt. Boldt, which owns several casinos in the Province of Buenos Aires, is not on good terms with CFK. (Boudou said that Boldt is allied with former President Duhalde who opposed CFK in 2011.) The Central Bank decides to print new bills in Brazil, so that Boldt doesn't get a lucrative government contract. In December of 2010, just as the new bills were arriving from Brazil, Guillermo Moreno declares the Boldt contract to rent Ciccone's facilities null and void. Through a series of events in 2011, Mr. Vandenbroele, a "businessman" with ties to Vice President Boudou's best friend (Carmona) from his days in Mar del Plata, somehow becomes the "owner" of Ciccone. In early 2012, the government went ahead with the $50 million USD contract that would see Ciccone (which was called Compania de Valores Sudamericana before this nationalization) print the bills. Now, after a growing list of circumstantial evidence that makes Boudou appear really guilty (there is no direct evidence that links Boudou to the corruption scandal, just several coincidences), the government wants to nationalize the company because it's a "public good."
If this company was so important, why didn't the government nationalize it in August of 2010?
Slightly off-topic: When Governor Scioli announced that he was going to raise taxes on the casinos last month to pay the aguinaldos, CFK's government responded the next day saying that they were going to loan him the money. In my view, this was a way to keep Scioli under CFK's thumb, instead of having him rely on obscure political interests (Boldt) that oppose the Casa Rosada. Furthermore, he also recently announced that he would be extending the licenses for the casino companies in the province. Boldt owns about five different casinos. Now the government wants to nationalize them as well, surely to prevent people from gambling, blah, blah.
Make no mistake.. It's politics.
If this company was so important, why didn't the government nationalize it in August of 2010?
Slightly off-topic: When Governor Scioli announced that he was going to raise taxes on the casinos last month to pay the aguinaldos, CFK's government responded the next day saying that they were going to loan him the money. In my view, this was a way to keep Scioli under CFK's thumb, instead of having him rely on obscure political interests (Boldt) that oppose the Casa Rosada. Furthermore, he also recently announced that he would be extending the licenses for the casino companies in the province. Boldt owns about five different casinos. Now the government wants to nationalize them as well, surely to prevent people from gambling, blah, blah.