http://educate-yourself.org/reportperusorosfinancedriots7may01.html



Soros Financed Peru Riots In July 2000


By Richard Deegan
http://educate-yourself.org/reportsperusorosfinancedriots7may01.html
May 7, 2001
 
A stunning admission was finally forced from the empire of the New World
Order’s George Soros that, indeed, he had contributed millions of dollars to
the political campaigns of Alejandro Toledo Manrique in Peru, included
$1,000,000 specifically for Toledo’s “March from the Four Winds” that
resulted in six dead and multi-million dollar damage to government and
private buildings and property (the specifics of these riots were the subject
of a previous Report).
 


Smoking Fax Obtained from Toledo Camp Defector

The admission came in the form of a fax from international currency
speculator Soros’ Open Society Institute in New York, issued by Director
Michael Vachon. The fax was intended to serve as a clarification after Toledo
(who had previously denied receiving money from foreign interests)
acknowledged receiving a million dollars from Soros specifically for the July
26-27-28 2000 series of demonstrations and attacks in the heart of Lima.
 
Toledo’s acknowledgement resulted from writer Alvaro Vargas Llosa’s
defection “for moral and ethical reasons” from the Toledo camp in view of
what he termed “conduct that left grave doubts about Toledo’s moral
capability to govern.”
While Toledo has long been known as indecisive and inconsistent as well as a
pathological liar on the level of his former ally,  exPresident Clinton, new
evidence of his machiavellian venality has recently rocked the Peruvian
political scene. The latest disclosures have shocked many of his staunchest
supporters.
 


Cocaine & Orgies

Neither revelations of his cocaine orgies with prostitutes, nor his resort to
corruption to avoid a paternity case have phased the population, who were
ready to believe his claims that these “accusations” were part of a sinister
campaign of dirty tricks to destroy his candidacy as he attacked reporters
who dared to question him. Not even his drunken harrangue on the night of the
2001 election (managing to get barely one-third of the vote) had a negative
effect or disappointed his fans, who view him as their kind of “macho” guy.
 
What did hurt, however, was his statement that “Now I have the press in my
pocket”, along with other evidence of his complete disdain for the democratic
process and the Peruvian electorate. 
 


The Telephone Deal

Shortly after the April 8 election, Toledo made a deal with Telefonica del
Peru
, subsidiary of the international conglomerate Telefonica of Spain that
controls most telephone and cable service in South America. Just days before,
Telefonica had faced two problems:

An investigation of $6,000,000 of bribes to politicians in Argentina who
supported higher telephone rates and
Populist demands (led by APRA candidate Alan Garcia Perez and echoed ny
Toledo during his election campaign) to reduce phone rates in Peru.
Telefonica wanted to help Toledo see things “their way”, so they arranged
for the elimination of a news channel, CCN, (not CNN) that had been critical
of Toledo, and provided a pleasant all-expense paid trip to Santo Domingo for
Toledo and his entouage. This produced a statement from Toledo that telephone
rates in Peru were, after all,  fair and didn’t need to be  reduced further.
.


Fun in  the Sun

The public was told that Toledo and his family had gone to Ayacucho (Peru)
for religious services, but his trip to Santo Domingo during Holy Week was
discovered. When information began to surface that he was in Santo Domingo,
there was initially panic from Toledo’s people, until his spin doctors
learned that ex-President Clinton was also going to Santo Domingo. Toledo’s
press releases suddenly indicated that Clinton had summoned Toledo to Santo
Domingo for an emergency meeting. Unfortunately, his writers had misread the
advance article about Clinton in the New York Times and confused the dates of
the supposed meeting.
 


Joseph Maiman, George Soros,  & The Peruvian Sol

The original reason for concealing Toledo’s meeting to Santo Domingo was with
one Joseph Maiman (a.k.a.Yosef, a.k.a. Josef), now an Israeli citizen with
his own background of financial manipulations, arms deals, Russian conncected
corruption, Mid-East intrigue and control of international gas and oil
projects. Toledo spoke at length with Maiman, first asking him to try to
purchase or otherwise take over Baruch Ivcher’s Frecuencia Latina, whose
Channel Two had been giving Toledo some negative press.
 
Maiman, however, was more interested in another of Toledo’s proposals. Toledo
was upset that after Garcia placed second in the election (and requiring a
runoff election), that the news had not generated more financial panic than
it deserved, considering that Garcia’s previous government (1985-1990) had
featured disastrous inflation in Peru. Yet one week after the election, the
Peruvian New Sol was still unchanged and stable on the currency markets. This
indeed piqued Maiman’s interest.
 
The Monday following this meeting,  a systematic attack was begun from
Switzerland and Israel against the Peruvian Sol and Peruvian “Brady” bonds.
This Bear market raid led to a 7% decline in the price of Peruvian Bradys and
a drop in the Sol from S/ 3.53 to 3.59 per US dollar.
 
The success of the currency devaluation move helped Toledo rise in the polls
and inspired Toledo to try another tour of New York and Washington, with an
eye to tapping his old pal Soros for some more ready cash.
 
Readers of these reports will recall that the reasons for Soros’ investments
in Toledo were to take advantage of currency fluctuations caused by Toledo’s
demonstrations, riots and inflamatory statements. When Toledo, after
pocketing a million in  July alone, had hit on Soros for more money in
October of last year, he was turned down because Soros “hadn’t gotten the
desired result” for his money.
 
 In other words, although the July 28 riots caused death and destruction for
the Peruvian people, there was no sharp change in the Sol’s rate of exchange.
Soros’ history of currency manipulations is legion, and he’s been accustomed
to winning as he had done in Peru in 1989 &1992, in England in 1992, in
Russia in 1996-7, and in Thailand in1997. But without currency market
fluctuations, there was no gain. Thus Toledo, having manipulated a 2% drop in
the Sol, felt George would give him more money to create furhter
destabilization of the Sol.
 
Boastful as ever, Toledo boldly announced last Sunday that he would engage in
a series of meetings with the heads of 35 US banks, President George W Bush,
and Secretary of State Adam (sic) Powell, among others. He missed the mark
somewhat, but he did manage to speak to old friends at Amnesty International,
Carter’s NWO front organization the National Democratic Institute, spoke to a
group of tourists at the National Press Club and even went on a tour of the
White House, but Soros’ US diector, Miguel Vivanco, told him that the
cupboard was bare and no further funds were available.
 
Toledo addressed some eight or nine functionaries of financial institutions,
during which he promised to increase privatizations, especially of Sedepal,
the state water utility, and to pay all foreign debt in a timely manner.
Those attending were both impressed and relieved. Luckily, they had not heard
Toledo’s discourses in Lima just ten days earlier in which he swore to end
privatizations, to never to privatize water, and to immediately halt payment
on 20% of all outstanding foreign debt.
 
What happened with the money raised (a total of over $1,600,000 dollars from
foreign sources) for Toledo’s March from the Four Winds demonstration? Among
those most surprised to learn of the large amount of money Toledo had raised
were the ten to twenty thousand Peruvians who actually supported this
demonstration. They not only paid their own way, but also contributed heavily
to cover their expenses. Now they were asking “What about me? What about my
bus fare?” The estimated total spent for this march (the five thousand people
who came from outside Lima were lodged in tents and were fed in communal
kitchens, with the Rimac River serving as their sanitation facility) is
around $60,000, including bus fare from those provinces.
 
The final tally spent was $60,000 spent and $1.6 million raised. So, what
happened to the rest of the money? Part of the answer is that much of the
funds were transferred to the United States under the names of various Toledo
family members. Unemployed nephew Jorge Toledo, who lives in Toledo’s million
dollar compound in La Molina, and accompanies him on most trips (including
the recent excursion to the US) and deposited over $500,000 cash in
Weise-Sudameris Bank, Camacho Branch on June 13, 2000; with a further
$200,000 cash deposit on September 29. Funds were transferred to an account
in Jorge’s name at First Union Bank in Charlotte, NC (US) on August 12,
August 17 and September 30, 2000. $200,000 each day for a total of $600,000
in just this one bank. This is exclusive of the funds obtained from Soros.
 
The Soros money, according to Toledo spokesman Carlos Bruce, was transferred
into Peru in small amounts going into phantom accounts using aliases and
co-operative straw men. Funds were then withdrawn and laundered through other
accounts, and subsequently “used for their intended purpose.” But since
these funds came from Soros’ Open Society Institute in New York, these
machinations and the whole transfer plan are clearly in violation of US, N.Y.
and Peruvian banking laws.
 
The more that becomes known about Toledo, the one-time Haight-Ashbury party
animal, the more he looks like a loser. He now refuses to speak to the press,
insists that any debates should be between advisors, and not candidates
(comedians have said, "First the chauffeurs will debate, then the bodyguards,
then the cooks, etc.). After polling 36% in a largely uncontested election
(less than his 42% in the supposedly fraudulent election of 2000), his 38% in
current polls is singularly unimpressive, especially considering the millions
of dollars and the two years spent in campaigning. Alan Garcia Perez, who ran
the country during a staggering 2,000,000% inflation period and was impotent
against terrorists and drug lords, is currently polling 32% after a nine-week
low-budget campaign. It seems that Al Gore’s not the only one who lost out
after Clinton left office.

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