MEXICO CITY/WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Inter-American Develop-ment Bank directors have met to discuss accusations in an anonymous email that the bank’s president, Mauricio Claver-Carone, carried out an intimate relationship with a staffer, three sources said.
One of the sources, a person at the IDB with direct knowledge of the matter, said the directors had debated the possibility of hiring an outside firm to investigate the allegations and asking Claver-Carone to temporarily step aside.
The two other sources confirmed that the bank’s 14 directors, its general counsel and its deputy secretary met to discuss the allegations and how to proceed in a two-and-a-half-hour virtual meeting on Tuesday.
The directors met again yesterday to draft a resolution to hire an external firm to investigate the allegations, the bank source said. The directors decided not to propose removing Claver-Carone from his duties, the person at the IDB with direct knowledge said.
Reuters was unable to confirm the claims about the alleged relationship, which, if verified, would appear to be against the bank’s rules.
The IDB did not comment when asked about both meetings and the allegations.
Claver-Carone, a former White House official nominated to the IDB role by President Donald Trump, did not respond to repeated emails or calls seeking comment.
Before coming to the IDB in 2020, Claver-Carone served under Trump as senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs at the National Security Council.
The IDB is a development bank that, while far smaller than the Inter-national Monetary Fund or World Bank, is a key player in Latin America. It was responsible for $23.4 billion in financing and other financial commitments to Latin America and the Caribbean in 2021, according to bank figures.
An anonymous email sent to the board of directors and the bank’s ethics officer a week ago accused Claver-Carone of carrying out a relationship with a senior strategist who reported to him, according to the bank source with direct knowledge of the meeting. Reuters has not seen the email.
The email also accused Claver-Carone and the staffer of misusing IDB funds, one source said, without giving more detail.
The IDB’s ethics code on its website states: “You cannot participate in any employment-related decisions about someone with whom you have an intimate relationship.”
The allegations surfaced just weeks after the bank’s annual meeting and just as Claver-Carone is seeking to push through a capital increase for IDB Invest, the bank’s private-sector arm.
Raising capital would require backing from the United States, the bank’s biggest shareholder, and its other members at a time when resources are tight due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and rising climate shocks. Leading Democrats opposed Claver-Carone’s nomination for the IDB role by Trump, a Republican.
The U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment when asked about the IDB meeting.
The resolution must be sent to the IDB’s board of governors, most of whom are finance ministers of member countries, to allow the directors to launch an investigation, according to the bank source with knowledge of the meeting.
The results would be shared with the governors when it is completed, the bank source said.
Claver-Carone, a hard-line Cuba hawk, faced a strong backlash ahead of his election to the IDB presidency in 2020 by some member states, including Argentina and Mexico, that bristled at breaking the bank’s tradition since 1959 of having a president from a Latin American country.
Claver-Carone dismiss-ed the push-back at the time, saying he had “overwhelming” support, citing public backing from 15 countries and six more privately.