Brazil’s New Air Airports Chief Involved in Scandal with Country’s First Astronaut

New airport chief in Brazil, Sergio Gaudenzi The head of Brazil's airports authority has been replaced in the wake of the country's worst air crash last month. Jose Carlos Pereira will be replaced by the president of the Brazilian space agency, Sergio MaurÀ­cio Brito Gaudenzi.

Some 199 people died when an airliner skidded off a runway and crashed into a building at São Paulo's Congonhas airport.

Mr Pereira is the second top official to be sacked over the crash, after the defense minister also lost his job.

It was the new defense minister, Nelson Jobim, who requested that Mr Pereira resign and who announced his resignation. The defense ministry supervises civil aviation in Brazil.

Gaudenzi, who should take office this week, is being sued by Brazil's Audit Court (TCU) for his acts as head of the Brazilian Space Agency (AEB).

The TCU argues that he acted illegally when the AEB paid 16 million reais (about US$ 8 million) to the Russia Space Agency to take Brazilian first astronaut, Marcos Pontes, into space, in 2006.

The airports authority, Infraero, has been criticized for allowing the Congonhas runway to be used even though it had not been "grooved" after being surfaced. Grooving helps water escape the surface of the runway.

It had been raining heavily on 17 July, the day of the crash – that is one of several possible contributory factors being analyzed by investigators.

The disaster was the second major air tragedy in Brazil in the space of less than a year. In late 2006, a Gol passenger plane and an executive jet collided over the Amazon, killing 154 people.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

A Cinematic Sensibility

Rich and powerful to the point of arrogance, when it cannot beat the competition, ...

Bolivia Pays Brazil for Oil Plants and Fines It for More than Buyback Price

Bolivia took control Tuesday, June 26, of two refineries it bought back from Brazil's ...

Nigeria Adds Brazilian Ethanol to Its Gasoline

On February, Brazil's state-controlled Petrobras will export its first 20,000-cubic-meter shipment of anhydrous alcohol ...

Brazil Calls Doha Round Talks Collapse a Major Setback

Negotiations for a new global free trade agreement fell through Monday, July 24, after ...

Brazil’s Furniture Industry Counting on Strong Dollar to Weather Crisis

To invest in design and new markets is the best strategy for furniture producers ...

Brazil’s Trade Surplus Tumbles US$ 13 Billion from Last Year

The Brazilian trade surplus (exports minus imports) reached US$ 734 million in the second ...

Brazil Vows Not to Allow Houses Rebuilt on Floodplains After Dozens Are Killed

Brazil’s minister of Cities, Márcio Fortes, has confirmed that houses destroyed by floods in ...

Brazil Kisses the IMF Goodbye

Brazil’s secretary of the Federal Treasury reaffirmed what the Finance Minister had already announced: ...

Five Indian Kids Die for Lack of Medical Help in Amazonas, Brazil

In Brazil, the health condition of indigenous peoples in the Javari Valley, west of ...

Adopting US Digital Technology Would Be Shame for Brazil, Says Argentinean

The decision by Brazil on its digital format could influence the future of telecommunications ...