Roberto Dromi, former Minister of Public Works under Carlos Menem and key figure in privatizations in the 90s, died

Roberto Dromi, former Minister of Public Works under Carlos Menem and key figure in privatizations in the 90s, died

The former Minister of Public Works Roberto Dromi He died at the age of 79. The former official who was part of the first government of Carlos Menem He was one of the key pieces of the State reform and privatizations during the 90s. The causes of death were as a result of complications in his health.

Dromi He was the main legal architect of the privatizations of the 1990s, which covered sectors such as telecommunications, railways and energy.

In 1989, together with Rodolfo Barra drafted Law 23,696 on State Reform, which allowed the sale of state companies such as YPF, Entel and Argentine Railways.

He was a key official in privatizations during the Menemist decade. He was the one who designed the scheme for the transfer of management of public service companies under private concessions.

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Who was Roberto Dromi, the architect of privatizations in the 90s

Born on April 11, 1945 in Mendoza, Dromi was mayor of the provincial capital during the last military dictatorship between 1980 and 1981. Between 1983 and 1989 he served as legal advisor to the chambers of Senators and Deputies of the Nation.

Upon arriving at the Ministry of Public Works, he appointed as one of his undersecretaries Rodolfo Barralater a Supreme Court judge. Both drafted Law 23,696 on State Reform of 1989, which allowed the privatizations they carried out: telephone, gas, water, electricity, railways and the oil company YPF They were some of those that passed into private hands during the Menem administration.

“Nothing that should be state will remain in the hands of the State,” was his famous phrase in those times. He said it when he was facing the privatization plan, which included the application of the toll system on some routes. In fact, in the ’90s he was denounced for bribes linked to tolls, but Dromi made a counter-complaint for false testimony and the case was filed.

The court also investigated him for irregular transfer of a 240 hectare field in General Pacheco to Telecom; In 2008, Dromi and other officials were seized for $108 million in that case.

Furthermore, last year he was definitively dismissed in a case for import of a ship with LNG from Trinidad and Tobago to supply gas to Argentina and for which the ENARSA company paid a sum of 2.5 million dollars.

According to the ruling of the federal judge Julián Ercolini, the investigation did not damage the “good name and honor” of Dromi. This decision was not appealed by the prosecutor in the case Carlos Stornelli, so it remained firm.

Source: Ambito

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