Colombia’s Comptroller Generals on Monday ordered to seize an engineering firm whose “visionary” late founder conceived the disastrous Hidroituango hydroelectric dam.
The Comptroller General ordered to seize 13 bank accounts and 12 real estate properties of Integral SA, which designed the Hidroituango dam that nearly collapsed in 2018, months before completion.
Another dynasty in ruins
According to the fiscal watchdog, the government contractors will have to pay $1.7 billion (COP4.2 trillion) for the disastrous project that was initially presented by co-founder Jose Tejada in 1969.
The fiscal measures seek to recover damages allegedly caused by the disastrous work of the company whose co-founder is considered “one of the most prestigious engineers in Colombia” by the Medellin Chamber of Commerce.
Medellin Chamber of Commerce
Since its foundation in 1955, Integral has become one of Colombia’s largest construction firms due to its close ties to the Medellin elite, which gave the company an advantage in bidding processes for major infrastructure projects.
Saenz presented his idea to construct a dam in the Cauca, Colombia’s second largest river, in a 1969 environmental study.
Former President Alvaro Uribe signed off on the company’s participation in a “promotional committee” that lobbied the dam when the far-right politician was governor of Antioquia in 1997.
The plan sparked extreme violence in northern Antioquia where paramilitary groups sought to displace locals, which would allow EPM to cheaply purchase their land, and guerrillas violently opposed the project.
The national government approved the construction of the Hidroituango dam designed by Tejada in 2009 when Uribe and Medellin’s public utilities company EPM formed a consortium in 2010 to effectively construct the dam that was supposed to provide 17% of Colombia’s energy in 2018.
From visionary to doom
Tejada was praised as a “visionary” by Medellin university EAFIT, which allowed one of the engineer’s heirs to write a paper on her own family for her masters in business administration in 2014.
Sarah Thenot
The dam project nearly collapsed months in early 2018, just months before it was supposed to be completed.
The discharge tunnels designed by Tejada’s company blocked and the rapidly rising waters of the Cauca River threatened to flood the project.
EPM workers were able to prevent flooding by using the turbine engine tunnel to discharge water, which allowed them to quickly finish building the $4 billion dam wall.
The disaster forced authorities to relocate more than 100,000 people who were living downstream of Hidroituango.
The aftermath
The disaster triggered a criminal investigation, and investigations by the Comptroller General’s Office and the Inspector General.
The comptroller general announced investigations against 18 politicians and former EPM officials in 2018, but omitted Uribe from the probe.
The former president one of the main promoters of the disastrous hydroelectric project, but is also the boss of President Ivan Duque, and all but untouchable.
Tejada died in 2011 already. Despite his alleged visionary abilities, there exists no evidence indicating that the late engineer foresaw that his crappy idea to build a damn would ruin his company 10 years after his death.