JANUARY 26, 2011
The senator is in fifth place among the parliamentarians who have greater equity. He chaired the Committee on Mining in the House until 2009. Among the five Senators more assets, the fifth is not lost: it is the San Juan César Gioja, brother of the governor of that province, José Luis Gioja. The congressman said to have $ 19.4 million. most surprising thing is said to own shares in mining companies more than $ 10 million. be recalled that he was president of the Committee on Mines and Hydrocarbons of the Senate's Office.
Ecoportal.net According to the site, in an interview in 2009 the journalist Alfredo Leuco, Gioia acknowledged that since 2005 had not been treated with mining related legislation in committee que él presidía. Incluso se pronunció a favor de la Ley de Glaciares.
Gioja dejó la presidencia de la Comisión en diciembre de 2009, rodeado de acusaciones de la oposición y, según el Diario de Cuyo, lo hizo en medio de una polémica mediática por el acuerdo impositivo entre Argentina y Chile por la explotación de la mina binacional Pascua Lama, de Barrick, en torno al cual hay versiones de funcionarios despedidos del Ministerio de Economía de la Nación. Además, había sido cuestionado por el veto presidencial a la Ley de glaciares, y denunciado judicialmente -del diputado Miguel Bonasso-, por incompatibilidad de funciones. Bonasso asegura que el senador preside la Comisión de Minería owning a mining company is a supplier of inputs from other mining. Gioja
appears in the ranking after the San Juan Pampa Roberto Carlos Basualdo and Verna (both Peronist dissidents) who entered either by more than $ 50 million, and the two senators Kirchner, William Jenefes (Jujuy) and Beatriz Rojkes of Alperovich (Tucuman governor's wife), who declared properties for more than $ 20 million.
http://www.seprin.com/2011/01/ 26/cesar-gioja-admitio-que- has-action-for-more-of-10- million-in-business- mining /
http://www.seprin.com/2011/01/
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