Paraguay leader hit by third paternity claim

ASUNCION, (Reuters) – A third woman in two weeks  has claimed that Paraguay’s bishop-turned-president Fernando  Lugo fathered her child, intensifying a political scandal that  has made him the butt of lewd jokes and even a pop song.

Damiana Moran, a teacher aged 39, told local media that  Lugo was the father of her 1-year-old son and she was  negotiating child support with the president’s lawyer.

Two days after going public, a second woman, Benigna  Leguizamon, 27, filed a lawsuit yesterday to get Lugo to  take a DNA test to prove he is the father of her 6-year-old  boy.

Earlier this month, Viviana Carrillo, 26, stunned  Paraguayans when she revealed that Lugo, known as the “bishop  of the poor” before he quit the church in late 2006 to run for  president, was the father of her son, who is almost 2.

The president recognized Carrillo’s boy as his son and even  remarked that they looked alike, but he has not accepted or  denied paternity in the two newer cases.

Many Paraguayans said he was brave to admit paternity in  the first case, and women in his cabinet defended the  57-year-old leader even though Carrillo claimed she started  having sex with Lugo when she was 16, below the legal age of  consent in Paraguay.

Opposition politicians from the conservative Colorado  Party, in power for decades before Lugo’s victory, railed that  the president was a national embarrassment and not trustworthy  but analysts said the political damage would be light.

“Yes, a lot of people are indignant and it will damage  Lugo’s image, but it’s not going to become a question of state  or interrupt the government,” said analyst Alfredo Boccia.

He predicted that the paternity suits would soon move onto  the back pages as Paraguayans turn their attention back to  perennial issues such as poverty as the economy stumbles.