Political and legal pressure has mounted sharply on Oscar Mira, the Area Representative for Belmopan in Belize, after a formal corruption complaint was submitted to the country’s Integrity Commission on June 23, 2026, calling for a full probe into allegations that he misused his official authority to direct millions of public dollars to family members and their linked business ventures.
The complaint was brought by Edward Broaster, caretaker for the United Democratic Party (UDP) in Belize Rural Central, filed under Section 34 of Belize’s Prevention of Corruption Act. Broaster’s filing outlines three core accusations against Mira: conflict of interest and unlawful personal gain, failure to disclose private interests tied to government contracts, and abuse of public office to deliver improper financial benefits to close relatives.
In the complaint, Broaster wrote: “I have reasonable grounds to believe that Hon. Oscar Mira, a ‘person in public life’ under Section 2 of the Act, is in breach of the provisions of this Act.” He anchored his filing in Section 34(1) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, Chapter 105 of Belize’s Substantive Laws.
At the heart of the allegations are two entities tied directly to Mira’s family: Jenny Mira, the lawmaker’s sister, and MP Farms, a business controlled by his brothers Stanley and Brian Mira. Internal government records pulled from the country’s Smart Stream procurement system include dozens of screenshots showing more than 100 individual payments made to the two vendors between 2020 and 2025, with the majority of funds originating from the Ministry of Defence, a portfolio Mira previously led.
Documented in the records is a single-day transfer of nearly $400,000 in public funds to MP Farms, while Jenny Mira received thousands of dollars across hundreds of separate smaller payments. Additional funding came from other government agencies including the Ministry of Health, the National Emergency Management Organization (NEMO), and the Belize Coast Guard.
A particularly troubling detail highlighted in the complaint is the consistent pattern of structuring payments to fall just below the $10,000 threshold that triggers heightened oversight from the national Treasury, a practice widely recognized as a method to avoid regulatory scrutiny. This pattern has already drawn significant criticism from the Belizean public.
Broaster is calling on the Integrity Commission to launch a complete investigation, cross-reference the claims against Mira’s official sworn asset and income declarations, appoint an independent special investigator, and refer the case to the Director of Public Prosecutions for criminal charges if evidence of unlawful activity is uncovered.
This latest development comes exactly one week after Opposition Leader Tracy Panton submitted a Freedom of Information (FOI) request seeking the full documentation trail for all contracts connected to Jenny Mira, MP Farms, and four other linked entities dating back to 2020.
In her statement announcing the FOI request, Panton laid out a series of unanswered public questions: “We want to know to whom were these contracts issued, what was the value, what tenders were publicly advertised, who evaluated the bids, who approved the contracts, were procurement procedures followed, were conflicts of interest declared, were payments structured to avoid scrutiny, were the goods and services actually delivered, and did the Belizean people get value for money?”
After weeks of public silence, Mira broke his silence on the allegations for the first time on June 17, one day after Panton submitted her FOI request. The lawmaker has denied any personal involvement in procurement decision-making, noting that tender oversight committees fall under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Finance, and that he has never served on or attempted to influence any of these panels.
Mira argued: “Tenders are published in the newspaper. Any interested person can apply. They go through a lengthy process. I had no say; I was not part of those committees.” When asked about the pattern of below-threshold structured payments, Mira acknowledged the public’s concern but stopped short of admitting any wrongdoing, stating: “I do not think that anyone wouldn’t be concerned. But was anything illegally done? I do not know. I believe that in every crisis, you learn from it, and I myself am trying to make sure that I learn from this.” Mira also denied having any knowledge of his relatives’ business transactions with the government.
Last Friday, the Integrity Commission issued a preliminary statement confirming that any member of the public with evidence of corruption can file a formal complaint that will be processed in accordance with Belizean law. Broaster formally submitted the complaint in person at the Integrity Commission’s Belmopan office on June 23, but the filing process was marked by unusual friction. After leaving the commission’s offices, Broaster told local outlet News 5 that commission staff were visibly hesitant to accept the complaint.
“I never seen jumpier people than that yet, everything they make calls, they didn’t even want to take the complaint,” Broaster said. He also criticized the recent decision to grant Mira a three-month leave of absence, noting that the current Prime Minister has publicly stated zero tolerance for corruption and called for corrupt officials to be imprisoned. “So, giving Oscar Mira a three-month leave, is far cry from what he has been advocating for. I just hope that he will uphold the standards and rhetoric that he has been pushing.”
Broaster has pushed back against claims that the complaint is a partisan political maneuver, insisting he is acting on behalf of all Belizean residents to protect public funds: “this is not a political move on my part, but rather on behalf of the poor people of Belize, the public purse.”
