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Brazil Congress: Mass arrests (1500) as Lula condemns 'terrorist' riots

Abdullah719

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Former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has been convicted of corruption charges and sentenced to nine-and-a-half years in prison, court documents show.

It is understood he will remain free pending an appeal.

Lula has rejected claims he received a flat as a bribe in a corruption scandal linked to state oil company Petrobras.

He says the trial is politically motivated and he has denied any wrongdoing.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-40588992
 
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Political leaders convicted and sentenced for corruption ?!

What is this sorcery you speak of ?
 
Is the Brazilian Prez suffering from aalmi sazish or deep state sazish? :srt
 
Oh well Lulla. Only if you were in Pakistan
 
He was a very good leader,the only good Brazilian one,yes people can say it was coz oil and what not,but he did well.

The extent of corruption in Brazilian society ,one needs to just check out their police officers,Brazilians are a lucky bunch they don't work as much as other countries but expect so much from their government and life.
 
He was great leader who changed the face of Brazil.

If any of our leaders had his achievements we would be kissing his feet
 
He was great leader who changed the face of Brazil.

If any of our leaders had his achievements we would be kissing his feet

Great leader my foot. He was the Putin type who made the most of high oil prices while they lasted, after which his country went to bits and he grew more despotic by the minute. Why do you think he is even being tried if he was so flash?

Brazil, Russia, Venezuela, Nigeria...birds of a feather. Long may $45 / barrel continue.
 
Shame on establishment backed Brazilian judiciary for attacking democracy :)
 
Brazil’s election authority to investigate Bolsonaro over baseless fraud claims (Post #33)

Far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro has won a sweeping victory in Brazil's presidential election.

Mr Bolsonaro won 55.2% of the votes cast against 44.8% for Fernando Haddad from the left-wing Workers' Party (PT), election officials said.

Mr Bolsonaro campaigned on a promise to eradicate corruption and to drive down Brazil's high crime levels.

The election campaign has been deeply divisive. Each camp argued that victory for the other could destroy Brazil.

What does it mean?

Mr Bolsonaro's victory constitutes a markedly rightward swing in the largest democracy in Latin America, which was governed by the PT for 13 years between 2003 and 2016.

For the past two years, the country has been led by a conservative, Michel Temer, following the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff. But Mr Temer has proven deeply unpopular with Brazilians.

With the outgoing president's approval rating at a record low of 2%, voters clamoured for change but they were deeply divided on which way that change should go.

Mr Bolsonaro's 10-percentage-point victory means the vision he laid out to voters of a Brazil where law and order and family values would be made the priority won out.

The 63-year-old is a retired army officer and member of the Social Liberal Party (PSL), an anti-establishment group that combines social conservatism and pro-market policies.

Mr Bolsonaro is a deeply polarizing figure whose remarks on a range of issues - including abortion, race, migration and homosexuality - earned him the nickname of "Trump of the Tropics".

He has the past defended the killing of opponents to the country's former military regime and said he is "in favour of dictatorship".

But after the results came in, he told supporters he would be a "defender of democracy" and uphold the constitution.

One of his flagship policies is to restore security by relax gun laws and suggested that "every honest citizens" should be able to own a gun.

He has promised to reduce state intervention in the economy and indicated that Brazil could pull out of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.

Mr Bolsonaro's promise to "cleanse" Brazil of corruption has proved particularly popular in a country that has seen dozens of politicians from the mainstream parties jailed.

He takes over on 1 January 2019.

Mr Haddad won in the north-east of Brazil, the heartland of the Workers' Party and the stronghold of former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whom Mr Haddad replaced on the Workers' Party ticket after Lula was barred from running.

But Mr Bolsonaro won in all other parts of the country, and in some of them by a very large majority, ultimately giving him a sweeping overall victory.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-46013408
 
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One of his flagship policies is to restore security by relax gun laws and suggested that "every honest citizens" should be able to own a gun.



What could possibly go wrong
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Had a very good conversation with the newly elected President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, who won his race by a substantial margin. We agreed that Brazil and the United States will work closely together on Trade, Military and everything else! Excellent call, wished him congrats!</p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1056885392522260480?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 29, 2018</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
One of his flagship policies is to restore security by relax gun laws and suggested that "every honest citizens" should be able to own a gun.



What could possibly go wrong

We will probably have more caravans trying to escape violence. Unfortunately people will be stuck between a rock(Trump) and hard place(Bolsonaro).
 
Seems to be the in-thing in the 2010s.
 
Been reading up on him during the past few weeks. He's basically a fascist in the making and yet another demagogue who has taken advantage of the dire political and economical conditions in his country to incite hate and then go on to actually win.

You know you're stretching the meaning of 'far-right' when even Marine Le Pen thinks your rhetoric is "extreme"
 
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro described his lungs as "clean" after he underwent a second test for the novel coronavirus and local media reported he had symptoms associated with the COVID-19 respiratory disease.

CNN Brasil and newspaper Estado de S Paulo reported that Bolsonaro had symptoms such as a fever.

Bolsonaro told supporters outside the presidential palace on Monday that he had just visited the hospital and been tested.

"I can't get very close," he said in comments recorded by Foco do Brasil, a pro-government YouTube channel. "I came from the hospital. I underwent a lung scan. The lung's clean."

The president's office said in a statement that the president is at his home and is "in good health".

Bolsonaro has repeatedly played down the impact of the virus, even as Brazil has suffered one of the world's worst outbreaks, with more than 1.6 million confirmed cases and more than 65,000 related deaths, according to official data on Monday.

The right-wing populist has often defied local guidelines to wear a mask in public, even after a judge ordered him to do so in late June.

Over the weekend, Bolsonaro attended several events and was in close contact with the US ambassador to Brazil during July 4 celebrations.

The US embassy in Brasilia did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Bolsonaro tested negative for the coronavirus after several aides were diagnosed following a visit to US President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago, Florida, estate in March.

CNN Brasil reported that Bolsonaro has begun taking the drugs hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, which he touts as a COVID-19 treatment despite little proof of their effectiveness.

Bolsonaro's official events on Tuesday have been cancelled, according to CNN Brasil.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...naro-insists-lungs-clean-200707020323710.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Breaking News: President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil has tested positive for the coronavirus after months of dismissing its seriousness. More than 65,000 Brazilians have died. <a href="https://t.co/oNfTNd79SH">https://t.co/oNfTNd79SH</a></p>— The New York Times (@nytimes) <a href="https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1280524823576395779?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 7, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
WHO wishes Bolsonaro swift recovery from coronavirus

The World Health Organization sent its best wishes to Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro after he was diagnosed Tuesday with the coronavirus, saying it "brings home the reality of this virus.

"No-one is special in that regard: we are all potentially exposed," WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan told a virtual press conference, adding: "We wish Mr Bolsonaro and his family the best."

The 65-year-old populist has often appeared in public to shake hands with supporters and mingle with crowds, at times without a mask. He has said his history as an athlete would protect him from the virus, and it would be nothing more than a "little flu" were he to contract it.
 
Oof 65,000 deaths.... they have the same population as Pakistan and we don't even have 5,000 deaths. Do remember that next time you curse Imran Khan.
 
Brazil got it really bad. It actually surprised me. Even Africa didn't get the virus this bad.
 
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has continued to tout an unproven anti-malarial drug as a treatment for the new coronavirus after testing positive for COVID-19.

After months of downplaying the virus's severity, the 65-year-old far-right leader announced on Tuesday he had been diagnosed with the highly infectious respiratory disease but already felt better thanks to hydroxychloroquine.

Hours later, the former army captain shared a video of himself gulping down what he said was his third dose.

"I trust hydroxychloroquine," Bolsonaro said, smiling. "And you?"

On Wednesday, he was again extolling the drug's benefits and claimed his political opponents were rooting against it.

"To those who cheer against hydroxychloroquine, but have no alternatives, I regret to inform you that I am very well with its use and, with the grace of God, I will live for a long time," Bolsonaro wrote on his Facebook page.

A string of studies in the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as by the World Health Organization (WHO), have found hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine ineffective against COVID-19 and sometimes deadly because of their adverse side effects on the heart. Several studies were cancelled early because of adverse effects.

A forceful critic of lockdown measures, Bolsonaro has largely shunned masks and derided the coronavirus as a "little flu". Instead, he has placed his faith in hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine, turning them into the centrepiece of his government's virus-beating playbook.

The two medications are often used against malaria, while hydroxychloroquine is also used to treat certain autoimmune diseases.

Natalia Pasternak, a research fellow at the Institute of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Sao Paulo, said Bolsonaro was setting a "bad example".

"He took hydroxychloroquine in public saying he's feeling good and that it was probably because of the medicated when we know that the medication doesn't work for COVID-19, so it's dangerous," she told Al Jazeera.

Kleber Carrilho, a political analyst in Sao Paulo, added: "He's saying that it's a possibility of a cure and ... he's confirmed that it's a 'little flu', it's not a problem for him - and we have a lot of people here who believe him. Then it's a big political and health problem, after all the economic problems."

'Poster boy'
For nearly two months now, Brazil's fight against the coronavirus has been in the hands of an interim health minister, an army general with no healthcare experience before April.

He took over after his predecessor, a doctor and healthcare consultant, quit in protest over Bolsonaro's support for hydroxychloroquine.

The health ministry has distributed millions of chloroquine pills across Brazil's vast territory. They have reached small cities with little or no health infrastructure to handle the pandemic and even a remote Indigenous territory.

"He [Bolsonaro] has become the poster boy for curing COVID with hydroxychloroquine," Paulo Calmon, a political science professor at the University of Brasilia, told The Associated Press news agency.

"Chloroquine composes part of the denialist's political strategy, with the objective of convincing voters that the pandemic's effects can be easily controlled."

With more than 1.7 million registered cases of the coronavirus and nearly 68,000 deaths, Brazil has risen in the charts as a global hotspot for the pandemic - with the second-highest number of cases and fatalities after the United States.

Bolsonaro's government has come under fire for its handling of the pandemic, with protesters at home and abroad taking to the streets, demanding his resignation.

The former army captain has often appeared in public to shake hands with supporters and mingle with crowds, at times without a mask.

He also repeatedly said there is no way to prevent 70 percent of the population falling ill with COVID-19, and local authorities' measures to shut down economic activity would ultimately cause more hardship than allowing the virus to run its course.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...esting-positive-covid-19-200709053747715.html
 
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has posted on Facebook that he was "very well" despite having tested positive for the virus.

He announced on Tuesday he had tested positive after developing a high temperature and a cough.

On Facebook, Bolsonaro again advocated the use of the drug hydroxychloroquine - which he and US President Donald Trump have praised in the past despite it being unproven.

Bolsonaro has repeatedly dismissed the seriousness of the virus and opposed lockdowns ordered by regional governors in Brazilian states.
 
One of the biggest idiots out there. He never took it seriously.
 
When an 80-year-old woman collapsed last week in the streets of the Brazilian capital's poorest and most populous suburb, she was rushed to hospital and put on a ventilator, neighbours told local media.

But this was not just any suspected COVID-19 case.

Maria Aparecida Ferreira is the grandmother of Brazilian first lady Michelle Bolsonaro, who grew up in Ceilandia, a sprawling, dusty satellite city that has become a hot spot for coronavirus contagion around Brasilia.

The modernistic capital was the first big Brazilian city to adopt social distancing measures to curb the spread of the pandemic in March and was weathering the crisis well, until the lifting of quarantine rules triggered a surge in cases, health experts say.

Among the city's spate of high-profile patients is President Jair Bolsonaro himself, who said on Tuesday he tested positive for the novel coronavirus after running a fever. In an online video on Thursday, Bolsonaro, who said he was working from home, again reiterated his position that economic crisis from the pandemic would be more dangerous than the virus itself.

Under pressure from Bolsonaro, mayors and governors across Brazil are loosening isolation orders even as confirmed infections spike, with 1.75 million cases in the country, with nearly 70,000 deaths - the world's worst outbreak outside the United States.

Brasilia is a case study in the risks of reopening. The capital now has more infections per capita than any other major city in Brazil, with 2,133 confirmed cases per 100,000 people. That is more than two times higher than metropolitan Sao Paulo or Rio de Janeiro, according to health ministry statistics.

Some of that may come down to more testing in Brasilia, which has the country's highest income per capita. But specialists say the recent explosion in cases has clearly been driven by a premature reopening.

Gyms and beauty parlours reopened on Tuesday. Bars and restaurants will resume business next week under a decree by Federal District Governor Ibaneis Rocha.

"This measure will condemn to death thousands of Brasilia inhabitants," said public health expert Rubens Bias, a member of the city's health council.

With rising deaths and its hospital system approaching collapse due to a lack of intensive care units, Brasilia should be in total lockdown, Bias said. He blamed the governor for ceding to Bolsonaro's pressure to reopen for economic reasons. The president has said the economic effect of lockdowns is worse than the health risks of the disease itself.

On Wednesday, a judge suspended the decree reopening Brasilia and the city appealed the ruling. The governor then declared a lockdown for all but essential activities in Ceilandia and Sol Nascente, an adjacent shantytown hot spot.

The governor's office declined to comment.

But the city's development agency said the Federal District has done more testing in proportion to its population than the United States, Switzerland or Austria.

It reported that coronavirus is still spreading in the city, though transmission has slowed to 1.2 people getting COVID-19 for every confirmed case, down from 2.1 in early April.

'Living hell'
Brazil's third-largest city, with three million inhabitants, Brasilia reported its first case of COVID-19 on March 5 - a 52-year-old woman who had returned from Britain and Switzerland.

In the two months after its first death, on March 24, Brasilia's death toll climbed slowly to 100. But in the month after shopping malls reopened, on May 27, confirmed cases and deaths accelerated five-fold.

On Monday, the death toll passed 726 and the city reported a record of 2,529 additional cases in 24 hours.

"It's chaos, a living hell. The cases don't stop increasing," said a nurse working in the emergency wing at Ceilandia's main hospital, exhausted from 12-hour shifts.

The nurse, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal by local government officials, said the hospital was short of doctors, nurses and ambulances to bring critical patients to the few beds available in intensive care units.

The pandemic has moved from affluent Brasilia to the teeming outer suburbs where workers often spend an hour on crowded public transport to get to their jobs in the centre, said the health council's Bias.

"It is really tragic here. The number of cases has grown a lot in the last few days," said Cilede Nogueira, a Sol Nascente resident.

Nogueira, who works as a housekeeper in central Brasilia, said bars in her neighbourhood were packed with people not wearing masks, and neighbours were heedlessly partying on weekends.

She said lines at banks were jammed with people collecting emergency payments from the government to supplement their incomes in the pandemic.

"There are electoral and economic interests that are more concerned with making money than saving lives," said Bias

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...vid-19-hotspot-reopening-200710131610501.html
 
Brazil, the world's number-two coronavirus hotspot after the United States, has recorded 1,071 new deaths from the outbreak, pushing its death toll to 81,469, with a total of 1,839,850 confirmed cases.
 
Coronavirus: Fake cures in Latin America’s deadly outbreak

Latin America is battling some of the world's most devastating coronavirus outbreaks, and is also facing the scourge of fake cures and unproven treatments promoted on social media across the region.

In the week when Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro tested positive for Covid-19, we've debunked some of these misleading claims.

A video of Mr Bolsonaro taking the drug hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for his illness has clocked up six million views on Facebook.

We've previously looked into the controversy surrounding the drug and the lack of evidence for its effectiveness in the treatment of patients with Covid-19.

While admitting that the drug had not been scientifically proven, Mr Bolsonaro said "with all certainty" that it was working for him, and that he was feeling better.

The anti-malarial drug received global attention when US President Donald Trump endorsed it both as a preventative measure - he took it himself for a while - and as a treatment for the disease.

Brazilian fake Facebook accounts

This week Facebook took down what it described as a network of fake accounts linked to employees of President Bolsonaro's government, as well as the president's sons Eduardo and Flávio.

These accounts had promoted misleading and fake news about the coronavirus, such as claiming the effectiveness of hydroxychloroquine as a treatment, and that the Covid-19 pandemic was being exaggerated.

Flávio Bolsonaro, a Brazilian senator, said it was possible to find thousands of profiles supporting the Bolsonaro government, and to his knowledge "they are all free and independent".

One of the removed Instagram accounts, called @bolsonaronewsss, was run anonymously, but researchers from the international think-tank the Atlantic Council found registration information on the page confirming it was linked to Bolsonaro's special adviser Tercio Arnaud.

The BBC has attempted to contact Tercio Arnaud for comment, but has not received a reply.

"Political polarisation here in Brazil has captured the debate about the pandemic" says Sérgio Lüdtke, Editor of Comprova, a Brazilian fact-checking project.

He says supporters of President Bolsonaro have adopted certain themes online, including the defence of the effectiveness of unproven medicines such as hydroxychloroquine.

Comprova has been fact-checking widely-shared claims on social media and messaging apps about the pandemic. Four out of ten of these checks since the end of March were related in some way to unproven drug treatments.

Fake 'miracle cure' has not been approved

At the end of June, a Facebook post claimed: "The Bolivian Ministry of Health approved the use of chlorine dioxide". The post has been shared thousands of times across Latin America.

But the post is fake, and officially denied by the Bolivian government.

Chlorine dioxide is a bleaching agent found in a substance claiming to cure a range of illnesses often advertised as "miracle mineral supplement", or MMS. ' There is no evidence it works and health authorities say it's potentially harmful.

You don't have to look very hard to find it being promoted on social media. We found Facebook groups created in the last two or three months in Peru, Bolivia, Colombia and Argentina, with thousands of followers promoting or even claiming to sell MMS.

Regional authorities have seen an increasing number of poisonings due to improper use of chemical products used as disinfectants, says The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).

The body says there have even been cases of health professionals promoting the use of chlorine dioxide solution.

In June a doctor in Peru in charge of his region's Covid-19 response was fired, after calling for chlorine dioxide to be distributed to everyone with coronavirus symptoms.
Read more: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/53361876
 
'Living hell': Brazil capital a COVID-19 hotspot after reopening

When an 80-year-old woman collapsed last week in the streets of the Brazilian capital's poorest and most populous suburb, she was rushed to hospital and put on a ventilator, neighbours told local media.

But this was not just any suspected COVID-19 case.

Maria Aparecida Ferreira is the grandmother of Brazilian first lady Michelle Bolsonaro, who grew up in Ceilandia, a sprawling, dusty satellite city that has become a hot spot for coronavirus contagion around Brasilia.

The modernistic capital was the first big Brazilian city to adopt social distancing measures to curb the spread of the pandemic in March and was weathering the crisis well, until the lifting of quarantine rules triggered a surge in cases, health experts say.

Among the city's spate of high-profile patients is President Jair Bolsonaro himself, who said on Tuesday he tested positive for the novel coronavirus after running a fever. In an online video on Thursday, Bolsonaro, who said he was working from home, again reiterated his position that economic crisis from the pandemic would be more dangerous than the virus itself.

Under pressure from Bolsonaro, mayors and governors across Brazil are loosening isolation orders even as confirmed infections spike, with 1.75 million cases in the country, with nearly 70,000 deaths - the world's worst outbreak outside the United States.

Brasilia is a case study in the risks of reopening. The capital now has more infections per capita than any other major city in Brazil, with 2,133 confirmed cases per 100,000 people. That is more than two times higher than metropolitan Sao Paulo or Rio de Janeiro, according to health ministry statistics.

Some of that may come down to more testing in Brasilia, which has the country's highest income per capita. But specialists say the recent explosion in cases has clearly been driven by a premature reopening.

Gyms and beauty parlours reopened on Tuesday. Bars and restaurants will resume business next week under a decree by Federal District Governor Ibaneis Rocha.

"This measure will condemn to death thousands of Brasilia inhabitants," said public health expert Rubens Bias, a member of the city's health council.

With rising deaths and its hospital system approaching collapse due to a lack of intensive care units, Brasilia should be in total lockdown, Bias said. He blamed the governor for ceding to Bolsonaro's pressure to reopen for economic reasons. The president has said the economic effect of lockdowns is worse than the health risks of the disease itself.

On Wednesday, a judge suspended the decree reopening Brasilia and the city appealed the ruling. The governor then declared a lockdown for all but essential activities in Ceilandia and Sol Nascente, an adjacent shantytown hot spot.

The governor's office declined to comment.

But the city's development agency said the Federal District has done more testing in proportion to its population than the United States, Switzerland or Austria.

It reported that coronavirus is still spreading in the city, though transmission has slowed to 1.2 people getting COVID-19 for every confirmed case, down from 2.1 in early April.

Read more: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...vid-19-hotspot-reopening-200710131610501.html
 
Brazil has suffered 1,233 more deaths and registered 39,924 new cases, its health ministry has said. The country has now recorded a total off 75,366 deaths and confirmed 1,996,748 cases in all, making it the world’s second worst-affected.

As the figures were released, the far-right president, who has repeatedly dismissed the dangers posed by the pandemic, publicly acknowledged a second positive test that suggests he has not recovered. Bolsonaro told reporters he would get tested again in a few days.

He continued to play down the country’s mounting death toll and said his good physical condition would prevent him from developing serious symptoms if he got ill.

Bolsonaro has also sidelined medical experts in Brazil’s handling of the pandemic, pushed back against state and city lockdowns and circulated often in public without a mask, drawing criticism from public health specialists.

He has also said he was taking the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine, an unproven Covid-19 treatment that he and Trump have touted as a remedy. Bolsonaro’s pressure to use the drug alienated two health ministers who resigned in the middle of the pandemic. The ministry is being led on an interim basis by an active duty army general.
 
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro says he is taking antibiotics for an infection that left him feeling weak - having spent weeks in isolation after catching coronavirus.

He appeared during a live broadcast and chuckled as he told viewers that he had "mould" in his lungs.

The leader said: "I just did a blood test. I was feeling kind of weak yesterday. They found a bit of infection also.

"Now I'm on antibiotics."

Mr Bolsonaro added: "After 20 days indoors, I have other problems. I have mould in my lungs."

He spent nearly three weeks in isolation at the presidential palace after being diagnosed with the coronavirus on 7 July.

He tested negative for the virus last Saturday but his wife Michelle, 38, tested positive on Thursday.

Mr Bolsonaro, 65, gave no further details about his infection.

Even after he was infected, the politician - who has previously dismissed the disease as a "little flu" - downplayed the severity of the virus.

He has regularly said that restrictions on businesses will be more damaging than the illness, but most Brazilians disagree with his approach, according to recent opinion polls.

Meanwhile, Brazil's science and technology minister Marcos Pontes, 57, has become the latest politician and the fifth cabinet minister to announce he has the coronavirus.

On Thursday night, Brazil's health ministry confirmed a total of 2,610,102 cases of coronavirus, up from 2,552,265 the previous day.

Some 91,263 people have died in the country after testing positive for the disease.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...d-in-his-lungs-after-covid-infection-12039534
 
Brazil first lady tests positive

Brazil's first lady Michelle Bolsonaro tested positive for the new coronavirus, the government announced on Thursday, five days after her husband Jair Bolsonaro said he had recovered from his COVID-19 infection.

The 38-year-old first lady "is in good health and will follow all established protocols", the president's office said.
 
Brazil reports 45,392 new coronavirus cases, 1,088 deaths in last 24 hours

Brazil has recorded 45,392 additional confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus as well as 1,088 deaths from the disease caused by the virus in the past 24 hours, Reuters reported quoting the country's health ministry.

Brazil has registered more than 2.7 million cases of the virus since the pandemic began, while the official death toll has risen to 93,563, according to ministry data.
 
Bolsonaro 'led Brazilian people into a canyon', says ex-health minister

Historians will savage Jair Bolsonaro for leading Brazilians into a deadly “canyon” with his shambling, self-interested and anti-scientific response to Covid-19, according to his former health minister.

In an interview with the Guardian, Luiz Henrique Mandetta accused the Brazilian president of playing a “pivotal” role in steering Latin America’s largest economy towards a catastrophe. Bolsonaro played politics with citizens’ lives at a time of global crisis, he said, as Brazil’s death toll rose to more than 105,000. Only the US has suffered more deaths.

Mandetta, who has hinted he will challenge Bolsonaro for the presidency in 2022, became a household name in the early stages of this year’s pandemic. He drew praise from left and right for his accessible, science-based alerts over the threat of coronavirus during daily press conferences.

A 55-year-old orthopedic doctor, Mandetta was elected to congress in 2010 and has faced criticism for opposing the Mais Médicos (More Doctors) health scheme that sent Cuban doctors to remote and deprived parts of Brazil. He was named health minister in November 2018, shortly after Bolsonaro’s shock election.

But he was sacked in mid-April after publicly challenging Bolsonaro’s sabotaging of social distancing. Speaking from his base in the midwestern city of Campo Grande, he said the two had not spoken since.

On the day Mandetta was fired Brazil’s Covid-19 death toll stood at about 2,000. Four months later it has risen to over 105,000 with the former minister one of many who blames Bolsonaro for the tragedy’s scale.

Bolsonaro has repeatedly downplayed the pandemic, undermined containment measures and attended protests and barbecues, using face masks incorrectly, if at all.

Mandetta said the fight against Covid-19 had been fatally compromised by Bolsonaro’s “utter contempt for science” – which saw him belittle the disease as a “little flu” and trumpet ineffective treatments such as the antimalarial drugs chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine.

“It’s interesting that he totally rejects science and mocks all those who speak of science. Yet when there’s any prospect of a vaccine he’s the first to come knocking on science’s door ... as if a vaccine would redeem him from his shambling march through this epidemic.”

Mandetta also attacked Bolsonaro’s “complete sabotage” of the health ministry. After Mandetta and his team were evicted, another health minister, Nelson Teich, took charge but lasted less than a month after also clashing with the president over Covid-19. Since May the ministry has had an army general with no medical experience as its stopgap leader.

Mandetta – who said he felt anguished and impotent about the situation – claimed that by forcing out specialists and surrounding himself by yes men Bolsonaro had lost touch with reality.

“When you’re in a situation where you surround yourself with people who say what you want to hear and not what is the truth … the leader ends up blinding himself to what is happening,” he said. “He listens but doesn’t hear. He looks but doesn’t see.”

The ex-minister suspected Bolsonaro’s refusal to comfort grieving families reflected guilt over the realisation his actions had cost lives.

“He led the Brazilian people into a canyon in quick march and people have fallen off and died – and having to recognize that this was a mistake, that this caused pain, I think must be politically tricky for him right now.”

Perhaps once the tragedy was over Bolsonaro might publicly express remorse, Mandetta said. But how could Brazilians believe the words of a man who had “openly criticized those who sought to save lives”?

He warned that without an urgent change in direction the average number of daily deaths – which has been close to or above 1,000 for nearly three months – was only likely to fall in late September.

Mandetta, who is from the rightwing party Democratas, has declined to confirm he will run for president but said Brazil needed a leader who could “pacify” the country after Bolsonaro’s “toxic” term.

“I hope the leader who emerges victorious in 2022 is capable of rebuilding Brazil’s broken social fabric, giving this country a sense of unity … and accepting that it just isn’t normal to go around saying Brazilians like to roll around in the sewage.”

Mandetta predicted Bolsonaro would eventually pay a political price for “making a beeline down the path of denial”. But on Friday one of Brazil’s top pollsters found the president’s approval rating had risen to its highest level since he took office in January 2019.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-luiz-henrique-mandetta-interview-coronavirus
 
Nearly half of Brazilians say Bolsonaro not to blame for coronavirus death toll, poll says

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Almost half of Brazilians think President Jair Bolsonaro bears “no responsibility at all” for the country’s more than 100,000 dead from the coronavirus pandemic, the world’s second highest death toll, according to a new Datafolha poll.

The poll was published on Saturday in Brazil’s Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper and says 47% of Brazilians do not assign him any blame for the body count, whereas 11% do.

Brazil has the world’s worst outbreak outside of the United States and Bolsonaro’s response to the pandemic has been widely condemned by health experts. Right-wing Bolsonaro has pushed for the use of unproven anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine to fight the disease, replaced health ministers who opposed his agenda, encouraged Brazilians to oppose lockdown measures and shown indifference to the rising death toll.

Bolsonaro himself and several members of his family have gotten coronavirus. His current wife, Michelle Bolsonaro, got the disease in late July and her grandmother died from the disease this week.

Bolsonaro’s fourth son, Jair Renan, who is 22, tested positive for coronavirus, his mother said on Instagram on Saturday.

“He is doing very well, taking hydroxychloroquine and will soon recover,” the president’s second wife said in the post, still signing her name as Cristina Bolsonaro.

Still, Bolsonaro is currently enjoying the highest popularity rating of his administration, according to the same Datafolha poll. Thirty-seven percent of Brazilians rated his term as great or good, compared with 32% in June.

The poll said that the spike in popularity can be explained by emergency payments the government has been making to low-income and informal workers set to expire in September. The government is currently considering whether to extend the payments.

As of Friday, Brazil had 106,523 deaths and 3,275,520 confirmed cases.

Datafolha interviewed 2,065 people Aug. 11-12, and the poll has a margin of error of two percentage points up or down.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...virus-death-toll-poll-says-idUKKCN25B0XY?il=0
 
'He became a hero': Bolsonaro sees popularity surge as Covid-19 spreads

Brazil’s hard-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, dismissed Covid-19 as a “little flu”, and said it should be faced “like a man, not a boy”.

He sneered that self-isolating was “for the weak” and raged against lockdown measures. He clashed with state governors, and his own former health minister savaged his handling of the pandemic.

But as Brazil counts nearly 5 million Covid-19 cases and more than 147,000 dead, Bolsonaro is more popular than ever.

Like his idol Donald Trump, the populist Brazilian leader caught the virus and emerged apparently unscathed. But while the US president trails Joe Biden in the polls, Bolsonaro’s government has hit a record 40% approval rating.

Much of that popularity is down to monthly emergency aid payments of £83 ($108) – or £166 ($217) for single mothers – that about 67 million Brazilians began receiving in April.

Giselly Andrade, 34, worked as a cashier until her second child, Gabriel, five, was born with microcephaly. She lives in Recife, in the state of Pernambuco – the poor north-east region that has traditionally been the electoral heartland of the leftwing Workers’ party, which ruled Brazil from 2003-2016. Now, however, support for Bolsonaro is growing in the region, where 65% have received emergency aid.

Andrade is one of them – and the payments helped change her view of the president.

“I didn’t expect this of him,” she said. “People said he only thought about himself [but] he’s shown the opposite.” Andrade spoiled her vote in 2018 but said she would now vote for Bolsonaro when he runs for re-election in 2022. “He’s been working, thinking of the people,” she said.

“He became a hero,” said Ricardo Fernandes, 31, an actor from Rio’s City of God favela who organized food deliveries to the community. Fernandes said Bolsonaro’s social media propaganda persuaded people he was behind the payments – when actually the government originally proposed a much lower value before congress forced an increase.

But Bolsonaro’s rising popularity has come at a price Brazil may not be able to afford for much longer. The emergency aid payments were halved last month and are due to end in December, potentially leaving nearly 40 million people adrift, according to a new study from the Getúlio Vargas Foundation, a leading business school.

According to research by Renato Meirelles at Locomotiva, a research institute specialising in low-income Brazilians, 51% of Brazilians are now receiving either the emergency aid or the “Bolsa Família” cash-transfer scheme introduced by the Workers’ party president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

But as Bolsonaro shows no sign of wanting to raise taxes for Brazil’s super rich, he will have to penalise ordinary Brazilians or cut spending. “There’s no magic solution,” said Felipe Salto of the independent fiscal institution, Brazil’s equivalent of the UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility.

Wilma da Silva, 51, who lives with her 10-year-old niece in the the Amazon city of Belém, started receiving emergency aid after losing her job as a maid when the pandemic hit.

She voted for Bolsonaro in 2018 but, since the £83 monthly payment was halved and rice prices soared, wouldn’t do so again.

“I don’t know what I am going to do to keep a house with a child … pay for electricity, water, buy food,” she said. “There are many families going through what I’m going through in Brazil.”

Bolsonaro now plans to introduce a new, revised Bolsa Família scheme next year called “Citizen Income” that will include some emergency aid money. It will have his stamp on it, just as the Bolsa Família is identified with Lula, his arch-rival.

Brazil already had a £17bn ($22bn) deficit target before the pandemic hit and it is now expected to soar to more than £125bn – a serious problem for a developing country with a history of hyperinflation and political instability, said Gil Castello Branco, an economist and founder of the non-profit public spending watchdog Open Accounts.

Brazil’s currency, the real, has plummeted, foreign investment flooded out of the country, 13 million people are unemployed and markets fret Bolsonaro will take a populist route, spending money his government doesn’t have to ensure re-election.

“There is a thin line between a deficit that can be controlled and it getting out of control,” Castello Branco said.

He warned that some financial manoeuvres floated by Bolsonaro’s economic team to fund the Citizen Income scheme bordered on “creative accounting” and alleged budget irregularities that, officially at least, drove the controversial impeachment of the leftist president Dilma Rousseff in 2016.

But Bolsonaro has an advantage, said Meirelles: the political opposition’s failure to capitalise on his mistakes.

Bolsonaro broke his own campaign promises to form alliances with mercenary, “pork barrel” parties in Congress, stopped attacking the supreme court and originally wanted the emergency aid payment to be a third of what it became.

Congress forced it higher, and Bolsonaro reaped the political reward. But now he is stuck with it.

“If the emergency aid does not become public policy like the Bolsa Família, there’s no chance of re-election,” Meirelles said. “It’s almost an issue of survival.”

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/oct/10/jair-bolsonaro-brazil-coronavirus-aid
 
Bolsonaro tells Brazilians to ‘stop whining’ as deaths spike

President Jair Bolsonaro has told Brazilians to "stop whining" about Covid-19, as he criticised measures to curb the virus despite a surge in cases and deaths.

His comments came a day after Brazil saw a record rise in deaths over a 24-hour period.

Brazil is facing its worst phase of the pandemic yet, leaving its health system in crisis.

In response some cities and states have imposed their own restrictions.

Brazil's health ministry says more than 260,000 people have died with Covid-19, the second-highest pandemic death toll in the world after the US.

On Thursday, another 1,699 deaths were added to that tally, a slight decrease on Wednesday's record 1,910. Meanwhile, a further 75,102 cases of coronavirus were reported, the second-highest daily rise on record.

The explosion of cases has been attributed to the spread of a highly contagious variant of the virus thought to have originated in the Amazon city of Manaus.

Yet on Thursday Mr Bolsonaro continued to downplay the threat posed by the virus.

"Stop whining. How long are you going to keep crying about it?" Mr Bolsonaro said at an event. "How much longer will you stay at home and close everything? No one can stand it anymore. We regret the deaths, again, but we need a solution."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-56288548
 
Covid: Brazil hits 500,000 deaths amid 'critical' situation

The number of deaths related to Covid-19 has passed 500,000 in Brazil, the second-highest in the world, as experts say the outbreak could worsen amid slow vaccination and the start of winter.

The virus continues to spread as President Jair Bolsonaro refuses to back measures like social distancing.

The health institute Fiocruz says the situation is "critical". Only 11% of adults are fully vaccinated.

Tens of thousands of Brazilians joined anti-government protests on Saturday.

President Bolsonaro has been heavily criticised for not implementing a co-ordinated national response and for his scepticism toward vaccines, lockdowns and mask-wearing requirements, which he has sought to loosen.

The country has reported, on average, 70,000 cases and 2,000 deaths daily in the past week. Most of the new infections and deaths were among people aged 20-59, Fiocruz said, warning that the start of winter in the southern hemisphere, next week, could result in more infections.

Despite this, governors and mayors have already relaxed the restrictions imposed to curb the spread of the virus. In many cities, restaurants, bars and shops have reopened while many people in the streets do not wear face masks or follow social distancing.

"People in Brazil are tired and they normalise death now so I think we still have a long way to go," Dr Natalia Pasternak Taschner, a microbiologist at the Question of Science Institute, told the BBC.

"If we're not successful in changing the behaviour of people and if we don't have campaigns for mask wearing, social distancing and vaccinations coming directly from the central government we're not going to be able to control it."

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-57541794
 
Unbelievable really!

Brazil has proved it is one of the most incompetent country in the world.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/03/brazilians-take-to-streets-to-demand-removal-of-jair-bolsonaro

Huge crowds of protesters have returned to the streets of Brazil’s biggest cities to demand the removal of a president they blame for more than half a million coronavirus deaths.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators hit the streets of Rio de Janeiro on Saturday morning as calls for Jair Bolsonaro’s impeachment intensified after allegations that members of his government had sought to illegally profit from the purchase of Covid vaccines.

“The people have awoken,” said Benedita da Silva, a 79-year-old congresswoman and veteran of the Brazilian left, as she joined the rally.

“I’m here because we absolutely have to get this monster out of power and reclaim Brazil,” said Magda Souza, a 64-year-old dissenter, as she marched through downtown Rio with her husband, José Baptisa. “We’re surrounded by barbarism,” Souza added as a police helicopter circled over the throng.

Souza wore a bright red T-shirt calling for the return of Bolsonaro’s leftwing antagonist, the former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who recently stormed back on the political scene after his political rights were restored and is expected to run for the presidency next year. But many at the demonstration said they were not members of Brazil’s left and simply wanted rid of a far-right leader they accused of condemning thousands of their fellow citizens to death with his chaotic – and some now suspect corrupt – response to coronavirus.

On Friday, a supreme court judge ordered an investigation into whether Bolsonaro had failed to act after being alerted to suspicions of high-level corruption involving the procurement of millions of Covid vaccines from the Indian pharmaceutical company Bharat Biotech. According to the official count, more than 522,000 Brazilians have lost their lives to coronavirus, second only to the US , with the South American country’s epidemic still far from being controlled.

Patricia Ribeiro, a 47-year-old registrar, said she had never attended a street protest before this, but had come to pay tribute to her brother, Pedro Ribeiro, who died in March after catching Covid and spending eight days on a ventilator.

“I blame the government for my brother’s death,” she said. “They behave as if our lives are worth nothing, as if human life was worthless.”

“He had so many dreams,” Ribeiro added of her brother, a singlefather who was about to graduate from university and leaves two orphaned children.

Daniel Melo, an 18-year-old student, came to remember his 86-year-old grandmother, Conceição, who also died of Covid. “She went to hospital and never came home,” Melo said, adding that he blamed Brazil’s “genocidal” president for failing to alert citizens to the dangers of coronavirus – a disease Bolsonaro has dismissed as a “little flu”.

“He wanted to kill everyone,” Melo claimed.

Many protesters waved Brazil’s yellow and green flag – a symbol used by Jair Bolsonaro’s far-right movement – in an effort to reclaim the flag from his followers.

“It isn’t their flag, it’s the Brazilian flag and we are Brazilians. Brazil belongs to all of us. We are the children of this nation. We are patriots, just as they claim to be,” said André da Silva, a leftist activist from a social group called Movimento Favela Ação who was among those carrying the Brazilian flag.

Paulo Betti, a celebrated actor and director, was another who came clutching Brazil’s green and yellow jack. “We’re here to honour the dead and to declare: ‘We are alive!’” the 68-year-old said, attacking Bolsonaro’s assault on the Brazilian Amazon.

“We cannot allow this destruction to continue,” said Sílvia Buarque, awell-known actor who said Bolsonaro needed to be immediately removed from office. “This pandemic has convinced me that we cannot wait to vote him out [in 2022].”

Anti-Bolsonaro protests were reported to have taken place in many of Brazil’s most important cities, including Belém, Recife, São Paulo and Brasília, as well as European cities including London, Barcelona and Dublin.

“The primary objective is to bring down Bolsonaro,” said Maurício Machado, a 43-year-old waiter who came to the Rio rally wearing a face shield inscribed with the words: “Genocidal Bolsonaro. Biological threat.”

“Bolsonaro is a biological threat, a political threat, a psychological threat and a extraterrestrial threat,” Machado said.

Guilherme Boulos, a prominent leftist and one of the organisers of the São Paulo rally, said the Covid corruption allegations had added to already profound public anger aganist Bolsonaro. “For the first time I think impeachment is a real possibility,” Boulos said, celebrating the fact that rightwingers were now joining the protest movement.

Political observers are skeptical about Bolsonaro’s imminent demise, pointing to the opposition of Arthur Lira, the president of Brazil’s lower house, to impeachment. Lira would need to approve the start of impeachment proceedings and at Saturday’s demos, the politician – who is a member of the powerful political bloc propping up Bolsonaro – found himself in protesters’ crosshairs. “Arthur Lira: an accomplice to genocide,” read one banner.

Another poster said simply: “Vaccines not bribes”.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/05/corruption-allegations-increase-pressure-on-bolsonaro

The Brazilian president has come under further pressure after being personally implicated in an alleged corruption racket involving the supposed misappropriation of his workforce’s wages.

Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right populist who admires Donald Trump, took office in January 2019 vowing to “forever free the fatherland from the yoke of corruption”.

On Monday, however, a leading Brazilian news website published a series of reports that threatened to fatally undermine Bolsonaro’s already tenuous claim to be a clean-living conservative. UOL claimed its reports, called “the secret life of Jair”, suggested he had presided over an embezzlement scheme known as the rachadinha during his almost 30 years as a lawmaker in the lower house of congress, between 1991 and 2018.

One UOL story featured audio recordings, obtained from an unnamed source, in which Andrea Siqueira Valle, the sister of Bolsonaro’s second wife, allegedly discussed how her brother was sacked from his job in Bolsonaro’s congressional chambers. “André caused loads of problems because André never gave back the right amount of money that had to be given back, you see? He was supposed to give back 6,000 reals, but André would only hand over 2,000 or 3,000. This went on for ages until Jair said: ‘Enough – get rid of him because he never gives me back the right amount of money.’”

In Brazil, the illegal and reportedly widespread practice by which politicians demand a slice of their staff’s wages is known as the rachadinha, a slang term which roughly translates as the “salary split” or “cashback”. Bolsonaro’s senator son, Flávio Bolsonaro, has long been dogged by similar allegations that he oversaw such a scam during his time as a state congressman in Rio.

In a second recording obtained by UOL, the woman identified as Bolsonaro’s former sister-in-law says: “It’s not nothing I know. There’s a lot that I could do … to screw Jair’s life. That’s what they’re afraid of.”

The revelations – which Bolsonaro’s lawyer rejected as being based on “untruthful and nonexistent facts” – sparked renewed calls for the impeachment of a president who is already facing mounting public anger over his anti-scientific response to the Covid pandemic, which has killed nearly 525,000 Brazilians. Three mass anti-Bolsonaro demonstrations have been held since late May, most recently on Saturday when thousands of dissenters hit the streets after allegations of dodgy dealings involving the procurement of Covid vaccines.

“Bolsonaro’s tenure in the presidency is becoming increasingly intolerable,” tweeted Vem Pra Rua (Hit the Streets), a rightwing group that played a key role in the 2016 impeachment of the then president, Dilma Rousseff.

Leonardo Sakamoto, a UOL columnist, claimed the recordings provided strong evidence that Bolsonaro had presided over “a mafia scheme” and the presidency had been captured by a “crime conglomerate”.

Bolsonaro’s lawyer, Frederick Wassef, told journalists: “No ‘cashback’ scheme ever existed in the chambers of congressman Jair Bolsonaro or any of his sons.”

Bolsonaro is suffering a wretched spell, even by the turbulent standards of his two-and-a-half-year-old presidency, which critics say has inflicted historic damage on Brazil’s environment, public health and international reputation.

In March, his main political rival, the leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, roared back on to the political scene, with polls now suggesting Lula would trounce Bolsonaro in next year’s presidential election.

In April, the senate launched a parliamentary inquiry into Bolsonaro’s Covid response, with its televised hearings cementing in the minds of voters the president’s responsibility for Brazil’s chaotic – and, some now suspect, corrupt – handling of the health emergency. In late June, the inquiry heard explosive allegations that Bolsonaro had failed to act after being alerted to suspicions over a 1.6bn real (£232m) deal to import India’s Covaxin shot.

Bolsonaro has denied any wrongdoing and last week tried to distance himself from the claims of health ministry corruption, declaring: “I’ve no way of knowing what goes on in the ministries.”

At Saturday’s protests, however, many demonstrators carried placards denouncing what they called the deadly human impact of alleged corruption within Bolsonaro’s administration.

“Who did you lose because of a dollar?” said one poster, in reference to separate allegations that a health ministry official sought $1 kickbacks for the purchase of AstraZeneca shots.

Another protester’s placard said: “Bolsonaro behind bars now!”

Maurício Machado, a 43-year-old waiter who joined the rally, said: “He’s corrupt. He’s a denialist. I’m not a psychiatrist, but perhaps he is a psychopath.”

Despite growing calls for Bolsonaro’s impeachment – to which the rightwing New party added its voice on Monday – experts say that remains an improbable outcome. Bolsonaro’s ratings are plummeting but he has brokered a sturdy, if capricious support base in congress, including the lower house president, Arthur Lira, who would need to approve impeachment proceedings.

“Impeachment doesn’t depend on the opposition. Impeachment depends on Arthur Lira,” said Maria Cristina Fernandes, a columnist for the Valor Econômico newspaper. “And Arthur Lira has shown no sign of wanting to do anything.”
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/brazils-bolsonaro-says-may-not-accept-2022-election-under-current-voting-system-2021-07-07/

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro said on Wednesday he may not accept the result of a presidential election next year unless the voting system, which uses computers to record votes, is replaced with printed ballots that he favors.

"If this method continues, they're going to have problems," he said on a radio interview. "Because one side, which is our side, may not accept the result."

Bolsonaro's comments add to concerns that he is setting the stage to refuse to accept an election loss in 2022, much like his hero, former U.S. President Donald Trump.

Bolsonaro, who polls show is trailing leftist ex-President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, backed Trump's claims of a stolen election last year, which culminated in a deadly Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol building in Washington by Trump supporters.

Bolsonaro's comments also represent a hardening of his unfounded stance that the current system is liable to voter fraud. He is pushing a bill for printed votes, but it has failed to gain much traction in Congress.

Last week, Bolsonaro said he would not hand over the presidency if there was any vote fraud, the latest in a series of broadsides that critics argue are designed to weaken the credibility of Brazil's electoral system.

The president also said in the radio interview on Wednesday that he had asked the chief executive of state-run oil giant Petrobras to oblige Brazilian refineries to publish a breakdown of fuel prices so consumers know how much of the price of fuel was made up of taxes.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jul/11/top-brazil-newspaper-demands-removal-of-jair-bolsonaro

One of Brazil’s leading conservative newspapers has demanded the removal of the country’s president, Jair Bolsonaro, as public outrage over his coronavirus response and corruption dragged the rightwing populist’s ratings to their lowest ever level.

“Jair Bolsonaro is no longer in a position to remain in the presidency,” O Estado de S Paulo (the State of São Paulo, or Estadão) declared on Sunday as polls showed that for the first time a majority of citizens backed impeachment and considered their leader incapable of governing.

Bolsonaro, a former paratrooper and an admirer of Donald Trump, took office in January 2019, using social media to portray himself as a corruption-busting anti-establishment maverick who had come to drain Brazil’s swamp. Critics have long questioned that image, pointing to incessant accusations of low-level corruption and mafia ties that have dogged Bolsonaro’s family.

The anger appears to have spread across Brazil’s electorate in recent weeks, largely thanks to an unfolding scandal over allegedly corrupt Covid vaccine deals and Bolsonaro’s handling of the country’s Covid-19 outbreak, which has killed more than 530,000 people.

“This is Jair Bolsonaro’s worst moment. He’s melting and the idea people have of him is melting,” said Eliane Cantanhêde, a political columnist for O Estado de S Paulo, who said a congressional inquiry had laid bare the president’s “crass and preposterous” pandemic response.

Another major newspaper, the Folha de São Paulo, said on Saturday that Bolsonaro, who has faced a wave of recent protests, was suffering “a full-scale image meltdown”.

The newspaper’s polling division, Datafolha, said 54% of Brazilians thought he should be impeached, up from 49% in May, and 63% believed him incapable of governing, up from 58% Most voters considered their president “dishonest, insincere, incompetent, unprepared, indecisive, authoritarian and dim,” Folha said.

Perhaps most worrying for Bolsonaro was the finding that 59% of voters would not back him under any circumstances in next year’s election, when he hopes to secure a second four-year term.

Datafolha’s poll suggests the former leftwing president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, would trounce Bolsonaro in the 2022 race, with a 20-point gap between the two. “It will be the Brazilian people who free themselves of Bolsonaro,” Lula told the Guardian recently after regaining his political rights.

Growing rightwing calls for Bolsonaro’s impeachment seem partly driven by conservative angst over Lula’s return. Some on the right opposed to the president believe the only way to block the leftist’s path to power is to oust Bolsonaro and confront Lula with less divisive rightwing candidate.

Bolsonaro appears to be feeling the heat, apparently trying to distract from the Covid crisis and corruption allegations with a series of anti-democratic outbursts in which he has groundlessly questioned Brazil’s voting system.

“Either we have clean elections or we won’t have elections,” Bolsonaro declared last week before calling the head of the superior electoral court an imbecile.

“Everything is going against Bolsonaro and he’s reacting badly,” Cantanhêde said, adding that it was unclear whether his attacks on democracy were “merely ranting” or part of a genuine plot to cling to power with the support some elements of the armed forces.

O Estado de S Paulo, which did not oppose Bolsonaro’s election despite his long history of anti-democratic rhetoric, savaged that “explicit threat” to Brazil’s democracy. It called the president “a spoiled child … bedevilled by a succession of moral, political, criminal and administrative misfortunes”.

“The threats to our institutions and democracy must stop,” the broadsheet said, urging the head of the lower house, Arthur Lira, to start impeachment proceedings, something analysts believe remains unlikely.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/aug/03/brazil-election-authority-bolsonaro-fraud-claims

Brazil’s top electoral authority has launched a counter-offensive against Jair Bolsonaro’s Donald Trump-style campaign against the country’s voting system by announcing it will investigate his potentially criminal propagation of groundless vote-rigging claims. Bolsonaro has stepped up his long-running crusade against Brazil’s electronic voting system in recent weeks, apparently hoping to energize supporters at a time when his ratings are plunging over his handling of a Covid outbreak that has killed nearly 560,000 Brazilians.

Addressing followers on Sunday, the populist leader warned that next year’s presidential election – which polls suggest Bolsonaro would lose to his leftwing rival Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva – might not be held if physical ballots were not reintroduced.

Bolsonaro made a similar threat last month, leading another prominent leftwing rival, Ciro Gomes, to urge the international community to signal that “the premature death of Brazilian democracy” would be intolerable.

Last week, Bolsonaro, who has a long history of anti-democratic bombast, caused outrage by using public television to make unsubstantiated allegations about past elections that Bolsonaro himself admitted were not grounded in fact.

“There’s no way of proving whether the elections were rigged or not,” Bolsonaro conceded during the rambling two-hour broadcast.

The transmission, which was followed on Sunday by a series of pro-Bolsonaro protests where hardcore supporters demanded the introduction of printed ballots – drew a steely response from Brazil’s superior electoral court (TSE) on Monday.

The court voted unanimously to launch an inquiry into Bolsonaro’s claims of electoral fraud and ask the supreme court to include Brazil’s president in an investigation into the dissemination of fake news because of “possible criminal conduct” during Bolsonaro’s televised broadcast.

In a combative speech, the TSE president Luís Roberto Barroso said: “Threatening the realization of an election represents anti-democratic behaviour … Polluting the public debate with disinformation, lies, hatred and conspiracy theories represents anti-democratic behaviour.”

“Wrong things are happening in our country and all of us must be alert,” added Barroso, whom Bolsonaro recently called an idiot and an imbecile.

Barroso made no explicit reference to Bolsonaro but the target of his remarks was clear. In an editorial, the Rio broadsheet O Globo praised efforts to combat Bolsonaro’s crusade against Brazil’s internationally celebrated electronic voting system, which it called “nothing more than an attack on democracy”.

“Bolsonaro is lying shamelessly in order to be able to challenge the election result in case he is defeated next year, just as Donald Trump did in the United States,” O Globo warned.

Brazil’s electronic voting system was implemented in 1996 and has been widely praised for helping eliminate fraud and accelerate election results in a vast country more than 2.5 times larger than India. According to the TSE, more than 147 million voters spread across 5,567 municipalities used more than 400,000 voting machines to cast their ballots in last year’s municipal elections.

Bolsonaro’s attempts to undermine confidence in the system – which have echoes of Trump’s “stop the steal” campaign and similar efforts by Peru’s rightwing presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori – predate his landslide election in October 2018.

During a campaign trail interview in April that year, Bolsonaro’s politician son, Eduardo, told the Guardian he feared his father might lose the presidential race because of vote rigging involving the electronic machines. “The TSE’s fear about introducing paper ballots shows that, as we say around here, there’s a dog in that there forest,” he said, hinting, without proof, at a top-level political conspiracy.

Seeming to confuse electronic voting machines with paper ballots, Eduardo Bolsonaro added: “There are lots of stories of ballot boxes being opened at the start of the day and there already being votes in there for such and such a candidate.”
 
Bolsonaro's going to positively love these moves by his opponents, because if there's one thing primed to shore up support with the working class: it's a joint statement by elitist bankers criticizing a populist leader.

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/brazilian-business-leaders-letter-rebuke-bolsonaros-authoritarian-adventures-2021-08-05/

Hundreds of business leaders representing large Brazilian banks and other companies on Thursday published a letter titled "Elections will be respected," in an apparent rebuke of President Jair Bolsonaro's recent threats against the 2022 elections.

"The principle of a healthy democracy is that elections are held and all involved accept its results," the letter said. Bolsonaro has repeatedly said if a printed-ballot system is not adopted, the 2022 elections would not be held. On Wednesday, he threatened to react to a Supreme Court probe into his conduct "beyond the constitution." Without citing the president, the letter said: "Brazilian society is guarantor of the constitution and will not accept authoritarian adventures."

The letter's signatories included Roberto Setubal and Pedro Moreira Salles, large shareholders and co-chairmen in Itau Unibanco Holding SA, Luiza and Frederico Trajano, controlling shareholders in Magazine Luiza, Pedro Passos and Guilherme Leal, shareholders in Natura & Co Holding, Carlos Jereissati, shareholder in mall operator Iguatemi, and bankers such as Credit Suisse CEO in Brazil Jose Olympio Pereira and Lazard Chairman Jean Pierre Zarouk. Walter Schalka, CEO of pulpmaker Suzano, also signed the letter.

The letter was also signed by economists, diplomats and representatives of civil society.

On Wednesday, Bolsonaro raged against a Supreme Court investigation into the unfounded accusations that Brazil's electronic voting system is vulnerable to fraud. Critics say Bolsonaro, like former U.S. President Donald Trump, is sowing doubts in case he loses in 2022. He has already threatened not to accept the result if the system is not changed.

In an interview with an evangelical radio station, Bolsonaro said he wants to emulate the elections in neighboring Paraguay, where electronic voting and printed ballots coexist.

He said Supreme Court judges Alexandre Moraes and Luis Roberto Barroso are making "unreasonable" decisions and repeated that electronic voting is vulnerable to fraud.

Bolsonaro also said Moraes' decision to investigate him in a fake news probe is "absurd." During the interview, Bolsonaro cited a federal police probe that investigated a hacking of the Supreme Electoral court in 2018.
 
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/aug/10/bolsonaro-banana-republic-military-parade-condemned-by-critics-brazil

Critics have denounced Jair Bolsonaro’s “banana republic-style” decision to send tanks on to the streets of Brazil’s capital for a rare military parade in what was widely seen as a beleaguered president’s ham-fisted attempt to project strength.

Bolsonaro, whose ratings have plunged as a result of his chaotic response to the Covid pandemic, looked on from the marble ramp outside the presidential palace as a motorcade of armoured vehicles trundled past on Tuesday morning.

“Ridiculous. Grotesque. Pitiful. Needless. Banana Republic stuff,” tweeted the Brasília-based journalist Brunno Melo as the procession advanced under a perfect blue sky.

The hastily arranged parade – which experts said had no precedent in the years since the restoration of democracy in 1985 – was reportedly ordered by Bolsonaro last Friday and came on the same day members of congress were scheduled to vote on highly controversial Bolsonaro-backed plans to change Brazil’s voting system.

It also followed a succession of incendiary and anti-democratic remarks from Brazil’s leader, an authoritarian-minded former army captain who has warned next year’s presidential elections may not happen if the changes are not approved.

“This is an obvious and explicit attempt by Bolsonaro to show that the armed forces are on his side,” said Thaís Oyama, a political journalist who first reported plans for the military mobilisation on Monday.

Oyama called the event “typical Bolsonaro”. She said: “The only language he speaks is provocation. The only thing he understands is threats and chaos. He is obsessed with demonstrating that the armed forces are on his side.”

João Roberto Martins Filho, a leading military expert, said the procession was “completely unheard of” in the nearly four decades since the end of the 1964-85 military dictatorship and was an attempt by Bolsonaro to reaffirm his dominance.

“There are those who say the military chiefs control Bolsonaro … but I think he is utterly uncontrollable,” Martins Filho said.

Opposition politicians from left and right condemned the spectacle, which the defence ministry claimed was held to formally invite Bolsonaro to annual navy training exercises due to start next week near the capital. Those exercises have been held every year since 1988, however, and never before have armoured vehicles been sent to the heart of Brasília, which also houses Brazil’s congress and supreme court.

Alessandro Vieira, a centre-right senator, said it was unacceptable to squander public money on “an empty exhibition of military might”. “Brazil isn’t a toy in the hands of lunatics,” Vieira tweeted.

Sen Simone Tebet denounced the “improper and unconstitutional intimidation” of Brazil’s democratic system.

Omar Aziz, the president of a congressional inquiry into a Covid catastrophe that has killed more than half a million Brazilians, said: “Bolsonaro thinks this shows strength but it’s actually just evidence of the fragility of a president who is cornered by corruption investigations … and the administrative incompetence that has caused death, hunger and unemployment in the midst of an uncontrolled pandemic.”

Many also regarded the president’s tanqueciata (tank parade) – which lasted only 10 minutes, featured a distinctly limited selection of fume-spewing military hardware, and was attended by only about 100 hardcore Bolsonaro supporters – as a fiasco.

Marcelo Soares, a São Paulo-based journalist, called the pageant a “legitimate show of farce”.

José Roberto de Toledo, a political journalist from the magazine Piauí, compared the procession to the 1959 British comedy The Mouse That Roared, in which the puny Duchy of Grand Fenwick declares war on the US.

“It’s unbelievable … The only explanation is that they are trying to convince congress they need more money for equipment,” Toledo said. “Never in my wildest dreams could I have imagined they were capable of something so pathetic. It looks like it was staged by the opposition, or some infiltrated communist.”

Another wit compared the underwhelming cast of vehicles to the cartoon TV series Wacky Races.

Adding to the sense of absurdity, one pro-Bolsonaro lawmaker celebrated Bolsonaro’s parade on Twitter using an image of Chinese tanks processing through Beijing’s Tiananmen Square two years ago to mark the anniversary of Mao Zedong’s 1949 communist revolution.

Martins Filho said it was troubling that the commander of Brazil’s navy – appointed earlier this year after the defence minister and heads of all three branches of the armed forces were forced out by Bolsonaro – had not resigned when asked to stage an “absolutely unnecessary” parade that had badly backfired.

“The comments people are making about the armed forces [today] are absolutely brutal. I just don’t understand how they don’t see the damage this is doing to their image.”
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/brazils-bolsonaro-will-not-need-surgery-gut-blockage-medics-say-2022-01-04/

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro will not need surgery after being hospitalized for an intestinal obstruction that has now been cleared, his medical team said in a note on Tuesday.

The blockage was Bolsonaro's latest complication from a 2018 stabbing.

According to the note, Bolsonaro showed "satisfactory" clinical improvement and will start a liquid diet on Tuesday. Doctors inserted a nasogastric tube right after his hospitalization. Sao Paulo's Vila Nova Star hospital, where the far-right leader was admitted in the early hours of Monday suffering from abdominal pain, said there was still no timeframe for him being discharged.

The decision not to operate on Bolsonaro came after he was re-evaluated by his doctor, Antonio Macedo, who was vacationing in the Bahamas and arrived in Sao Paulo on Tuesday morning.

Bolsonaro has undergone a series of emergency operations since being knifed during a campaign event in September 2018.

The Brazilian president said on Twitter on Monday that he started feeling unwell on Sunday after lunch. He had been vacationing in the southern state of Santa Catarina and was urgently taken to Sao Paulo by plane.

Bolsonaro noted it was his second hospitalization "with the same symptoms" in a few months. In July 2021, he was taken to the Vila Nova Star for an intestinal blockage after suffering chronic hiccups.

Bolsonaro has been in power since 2019 and plans to stand for re-election as president in a vote scheduled for October this year.
 
Lula defeats Bolsonaro for Brazilian Presidency

For those people who closely follow the BRICS nations, a startling course correction is coming up.

The former President and Trade Union leader Lula has just overtaken Far-Right President Jair Bolsonaro in the Presidential election run-off, and the demographics of electronic voting mean that he will now win the Presidential Election. It looks like the final result will be roughly 51-49 in Lula's favour: currently with 84% of the vote counted it is 50.41-49.59.

Bolsonaro is an ardent Covid Denier and Election Denier, and it remains to be seen whether he will accept his defeat or whether he will seek to engineer another right-wing military coup from the 1970's playbook.

Meanwhile Lula has himself served jail time for a (later-overturned) corruption conviction by a judge who later became a Minister in Bolsonaro's government.
 
More change in the world.

Lula seems a good leader, he even has the courage to say much of what is happening in Ukraine is the fault of Zelensky and Ukraine.

He also supports a new world order with BRICS.

Another nail in the coffin of the petrodollar.
 
Lula seems like the Brazilian Jeremy Corbyn.

Is this a reasonable enough assessment?
 
Lula seems like the Brazilian Jeremy Corbyn.

Is this a reasonable enough assessment?
I don’t think so.

He’s a populist almost more like Jacinda Ardern.

But he ran a pretty strong economy last time around.

Three million votes left to be counted, and Lula leads by 1.8 million.

Bolsonaro needs to win 2.4 million of the remaining 3 million votes to win.

Of course the problem now is that Bolsonaro has stacked the courts with far-right judges. Lula may struggle to get anything done.
 
I don’t think so.

He’s a populist almost more like Jacinda Ardern.

But he ran a pretty strong economy last time around.

Three million votes left to be counted, and Lula leads by 1.8 million.

Bolsonaro needs to win 2.4 million of the remaining 3 million votes to win.

Of course the problem now is that Bolsonaro has stacked the courts with far-right judges. Lula may struggle to get anything done.

Arden is a globalist puppet. She is NZ yet spends so much time cheer leading war from her tiny little irrelevant nation.

Lulu is anti globalist.
 
It’s all over.

1.6 million votes left to count, but Lula leads by 1.65 million votes.

Bolsonaro has lost. One less Trump clone leader in the world.

Now he will do his Trump “It was rigged” act.
 
Arden is a globalist puppet. She is NZ yet spends so much time cheer leading war from her tiny little irrelevant nation.

Lulu is anti globalist.
With respect, maybe you need to review your opinions on Ukraine.

Ardern has no fighter or bomber aircraft in her Air Force. Not one.

She retains a ban on nuclear-armed American or British navy vessel entering NZ waters or ports.

Have you considered that maybe the Labour Party in NZ (and Australia) supports Ukraine because it is an innocent victim which has been outrageously invaded by a hostile and lawless rogue state?
 
More change in the world.

Lula seems a good leader, he even has the courage to say much of what is happening in Ukraine is the fault of Zelensky and Ukraine.

He also supports a new world order with BRICS.

Another nail in the coffin of the petrodollar.

Indeed. Its all about the bigger picture, BRICS+ - new economic world order, death of the petrodollar, lead by Russia.
 
With respect, maybe you need to review your opinions on Ukraine.

Ardern has no fighter or bomber aircraft in her Air Force. Not one.

She retains a ban on nuclear-armed American or British navy vessel entering NZ waters or ports.

Have you considered that maybe the Labour Party in NZ (and Australia) supports Ukraine because it is an innocent victim which has been outrageously invaded by a hostile and lawless rogue state?

With respect, your views are something which interest me or agree with me.

Neither are Arderns who has been very vocal of Ukraine support. Even to the point of attacking China. :)))
 
Indeed. Its all about the bigger picture, BRICS+ - new economic world order, death of the petrodollar, lead by Russia.

I think previously in modern history there have numerous attempts but USA/West were too strong economically laws in their favour, military power in their favour, world media behind them etc. Now Putin has changed the game like Maradonna did v England in 86. Nations feel confident to stand up to US hegemony and are slowly moving towards freedom and independence for their people.
 
With respect, your views are something which interest me or agree with me.

Neither are Arderns who has been very vocal of Ukraine support. Even to the point of attacking China. :)))
Doesn’t that tell you something?

New Zealand is suspended from ANZUS due to its position on American nuclear weapons.

New Zealand was not even invited to join AUKUS which is arguably going to be a stronger, more United military block than NATO.

So the fact that New Zealand adopts the position it does on Ukraine is obviously not due to American pressure but is where their unilateral choice lies.

Let’s be honest: both Bolsonaro and Lula are hopeless on Ukraine, trying to have a bob each way, hedging their bets and trying to suck up to their fellow BRIC Russia, with no danger at all of ethics or morality entering the debate.
 
Doesn’t that tell you something?

New Zealand is suspended from ANZUS due to its position on American nuclear weapons.

New Zealand was not even invited to join AUKUS which is arguably going to be a stronger, more United military block than NATO.

So the fact that New Zealand adopts the position it does on Ukraine is obviously not due to American pressure but is where their unilateral choice lies.

Let’s be honest: both Bolsonaro and Lula are hopeless on Ukraine, trying to have a bob each way, hedging their bets and trying to suck up to their fellow BRIC Russia, with no danger at all of ethics or morality entering the debate.

NZ is irrelevant so little need for them to be in AUKUS. Ardern came out as some sort of peace loving liberal so couldn't turn to then hosting nuclear subs or anything to do with nuclear power.

Lula cares for his people more than for Ukraine or do you expect him to be foolish like European politicians harming their own for some Nazi loving , corrupt nation?
 
Indeed. Its all about the bigger picture, BRICS+ - new economic world order, death of the petrodollar, lead by Russia.
Russia is leading the end of the petrodollar you say? You do know what the first three exports of Russia are?

Some of you lot just need a parallel universe to exist in. Like a post truth world.

Seriously dude, you better be getting paid by Moscow for some of the stuff you post, because it’s damn shame if you put in all this whole logical contortionist act for free.
 
Brazil has taken a turn to the left as former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva beat far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro in the presidential election.

After a divisive campaign which saw two bitter rivals on opposite sides of the political spectrum go head to head, Lula won 50.9% of the votes.

It was enough to beat Jair Bolsonaro, whose supporters had been confident of victory.

But the division which this election has highlighted is unlikely to vanish.

It is a stunning comeback for a politician who could not run in the last presidential election in 2018 because he was in jail and banned from standing for office.

He had been found guilty of receiving a bribe from a Brazilian construction firm in return for contracts with Brazil's state oil company Petrobras.

Lula spent 580 days in jail before his conviction was annulled and he returned to the political fray.

"They tried to bury me alive and here I am," he said, kicking off his victory speech.

BBC
 
With respect, your views are something which interest me or agree with me.

Neither are Arderns who has been very vocal of Ukraine support. Even to the point of attacking China. :)))

It seems like [MENTION=132916]Junaids[/MENTION] is a big fan of Lula
 
Bolsanaro was truly bad, an ignoramus whose mishandling of COVID resulted in hundreds of thousands of excess deaths.

I hope this guy can be better. The populist right have no answers.
 
Under Lulu, deforestation of Amazonia fell by 80%. Under Bolsanaro it was heading back up. The world is healthier with Lula in charge.
 
More than 17 hours after Brazil's electoral chief declared Luíz Inácio Lula da Silva the winner of the presidential election, defeated incumbent Jair Bolsonaro has yet to concede.

The far-right president is said to have gone to sleep after he narrowly lost to his left-wing arch rival.

His silence is raising concern that he may not accept the result.

He has in the past cast unfounded doubts on the voting system.

Combative statements from Mr Bolsonaro in the past - such as that "only God" could remove him from office - mean there is a tense wait for him to appear in public.

Brazil's Superior Electoral Court announced that Lula had won the run-off of the presidential election just minutes before 20:00 local time (23:00 GMT) on Sunday.

With all the votes counted, Lula had 50.9% of the valid votes against Mr Bolsonaro's 49.1%.

In his victory speech, Lula touched on the political rift running through Brazil which further deepened during a bitterly fought and often acrimonious election campaign.

"This country needs peace and unity. This population doesn't want to fight anymore," he said, promising to govern for all Brazilians and not just for those who had voted for him.

Congratulations have poured in from across the world, including from the leaders of Britain, China, France, India and Russia. US President Biden said the win came "following free, fair and credible elections".

But even though it is traditional for the losing candidate to phone the winner, and to make a statement acknowledging their defeat, Mr Bolsonaro has so far remained silent.

People close to the president said that after the result he had "gone to sleep" at the presidential palace in the capital, Brasilia.

In the morning, a presidential adviser and Mr Bolsonaro's vice-presidential running mate were seen arriving at the palace, but it is not clear if he met them and what was said.

Later, Mr Bolsonaro was seen leaving the palace and travelling to the building where his official office is located.

Brazilian media are reporting that everything has been set up for a presidential news conference but that no one knows if one will be held in the next hours.

Meanwhile, close allies of Mr Bolsonaro have acknowledged Lula's election win, among them the powerful leader of the lower house of Congress, Arthur Lira, and Tarcísio de Freitas, who is the new governor of São Paulo state.

The strong backing Lula has received both at home and abroad so quickly after his win will make it more difficult for Mr Bolsonaro to contest the result, analysts say.

However, an uncooperative outgoing president could make the two-month transition period until Lula is due to be sworn in on 1 January 2023 a lot bumpier.

Some disruption has already been caused by lorry drivers loyal to Mr Bolsonaro, who have blocked roads in at least 13 states.

A number of the roadblocks have reportedly been cleared but the remaining ones are causing considerable disruption on major roads.

Lula has not talked about his defeated rival since his victory speech and has instead held a meeting with the Argentine president.

His party says he will speak to US President Biden on the phone later today.

BBC
 
Brazil's Bolsonaro to break silence after election defeat

Brazil's far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, is expected to speak in the coming hours - breaking the silence he has maintained since being defeated in Sunday's presidential election.

Tension has risen in the country after Mr Bolsonaro broke with the tradition of acknowledging defeat.

Some of his supporters are refusing to recognise the results, and have erected roadblocks across the country.

Police said they had cleared more than 300 roadblocks so far, but 267 remain.

Dozens of flights in and out of São Paulo's international airport had to be cancelled after a key access road was cut off by protesters.

Blockages have been reported in all but two states, causing considerable disruption and affecting food supply chains.

Travellers on busses reported running low on water and food as they spent hours stuck in queues.

The head of Brazil's Supreme Court, Alexandre de Moraes, said there was "a risk to national security" and ordered that the roads be cleared.

The blockades started shortly after Brazil's electoral authorities announced a narrow win for Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the run-off of the presidential election.

With all the votes counted, Lula had 50.9% of the valid votes against Mr Bolsonaro's 49.1%.

The result was announced just before 20:00 local time (23:00 GMT) on Sunday. Since then, Mr Bolsonaro has neither conceded defeat - nor challenged the results.

It is customary for the defeated candidate to congratulate the winner and no previous outgoing president has taken this long to contact their successor.

Normally very active on social media, Mr Bolsonaro has also remained silent on all his social platforms.

On Tuesday, the group representing highway police said the president's silence "was encouraging a section of his followers to block Brazilian roads".

It is not yet clear what the outgoing president will say in his speech, but Communications Minister Fábio Faria told Reuters news agency that Mr Bolsonaro would not contest the election result.

Combative statements from the president in the past - such as that "only God" could remove him from office - mean there is a tense wait for him to appear in public.

Before the election, he had repeatedly cast unfounded doubts on the voting system.

Close allies of Mr Bolsonaro however have congratulated Lula on his win, and the powerful speaker of the lower house of Congress, Arthur Lira, said that "the will of the majority, as it is expressed in the polls, can never be contested".

Congratulations also poured in from across the world, with US President Biden saying the win came "following free, fair and credible elections".

Members of Mr Bolsonaro's government have also been in touch with Lula's team to start working on the transition of power ahead of Lula's swearing-in on 1 January 2023.

And while Mr Bolsonaro is looking increasingly isolated politically, hardcore supporters appear emboldened by his failure to acknowledge defeat.

"We will not accept losing what we have gained, we want what is written on our flag, 'order and progress'," one protester in Rio de Janeiro told AFP news agency.

"We will not accept the situation as it is," the man added.

President-elect Lula, meanwhile, has been holding phone calls with world leaders, including US President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

He also had an in-person meeting with Argentine President Alberto Fernández.

BBC
 
Wonder what Bolsonaro will say! Interesting.
 
He said he will cooperate with changing of power. Did not accept defeat though. Thin skinned right winger. Hahahaha
 
Bolsonaro breaks silence without publicly conceding

Brazil's far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, has broken the silence he had maintained since being defeated in Sunday's presidential election.

He thanked voters who had cast their ballots for him but did not acknowledge defeat.

But he did not contest the result either, as some had feared he would.

His chief of staff, Ciro Nogueira, spoke after Mr Bolsonaro's brief statement saying that the "process of transition" of power would begin.

Even though Mr Bolsonaro did not himself acknowledge defeat in his own words, Brazil's Supreme Court released a statement shortly after his speech saying that by authorising the transition of power, he had recognised the result of the election.

Combative statements from the president in the past - such as that "only God" could remove him from office - meant that there had been a tense wait for him to appear in public.

Before the election, he had also repeatedly cast unfounded doubts on the voting system.

When he finally appeared in public, 44 hours after the election result was announced, Mr Bolsonaro's statement lasted only two minutes and he did not take any questions from the assembled reporters.

In the message aimed at his supporters, Mr Bolsonaro said that "our dreams continue as alive as ever".

He repeated the values he says he and his party stand for - "God, fatherland, family and freedom" - and insisted that he would continue to strive for "order and progress", the words emblazoned on Brazil's flag.

He did not mention Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, his arch rival who narrowly beat him on Sunday, at all. In a break with tradition, Mr Bolsonaro has still not called the man who defeated him in the election.

Hardcore supporters of Mr Bolsonaro - who refuse to accept that he lost - have erected hundreds of roadblocks in all but two states of Brazil.

In his speech, Mr Bolsonaro referred to them as "current popular movements" and said they were "the fruit of indignation and a sense of injustice of how the electoral process unfolded".

He added that "peaceful demonstrations" would always be welcome, but that "our methods can't be the same as those used by the left, which always harmed the population, such as invasion of lands, disrespecting property and impeding the right to come and go".

Read more: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-63451860
 
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has appealed to truckers protesting against Sunday's election results to clear the roads and protest elsewhere.

Supporters of the far-right president have erected hundreds of roadblocks across Brazil since it was announced that Mr Bolsonaro's left-wing rival Lula won the election.

Mr Bolsonaro said blocking roads was not a part of "legitimate" protests.

He encouraged people to choose other ways of demonstrating.

Many hardcore Bolsonaro supporters have refused to accept the result of Sunday's presidential run-off, which saw former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva narrowly win with 50.9% of valid votes.

Angry with the result, lorry drivers set up blockades across the country. They have so far lasted three days and have caused considerable disruption to the transport of goods, including food and fuel.

Police have struggled to contain all of the blockades, although the federal highway police said more than 700 had now been dismantled.

Addressing the blockades in a video posted on his Twitter account on Wednesday, Mr Bolsonaro said: "I know you are upset... Me too. But we have to keep our heads straight.

"I want to make an appeal: clear the roads," he said, adding that blocking roads "obstructs our right to come and go, which is in our constitution".

However, he encouraged protesters to find other means of demonstrating and welcomed the various rallies that have been held in his support, in which people have displayed Brazilian flags and chanted anti-Lula slogans.

Some have also called for military intervention to keep Mr Bolsonaro in power.

"This is very welcome and is part of democracy," he said.

Although Mr Bolsonaro has still not publicly conceded defeat, in a speech on Tuesday, he did not contest the election result either.

He also agreed to the transition of power in the speech, which Brazil's Supreme Court said shortly afterwards showed that he had recognised the result of the election.

Mr Bolsonaro's term as president will end when Lula is inaugurated as his successor on 1 January.

Lula, who previously served as president from 2003 to 2010, is now 77 and will become the oldest person to assume the post.

BBC
 
Good news. Unfortunately the global revolving door of toxic hard right leaders continues as Netanyahu is on verge of a comeback - this time with help of extremist Kahanists in Israel.
 
Lula is far from perfect, I believe he's had issues with corruption in the past - but Bolsonaro is **** of the earth levels of atrocious, so the only way is up for Brazil.
 
Brazil's electoral court has rejected a challenge against the presidential election result made by the far-right party of President Jair Bolsonaro.

He narrowly lost to the leftist former leader, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and his Liberal Party (PL) claimed without evidence that voting machines were compromised.

The court said the complaint was made "in bad faith" and fined the party 22.9m reais (£3.5m; $4.3m).

Lula takes office on 1 January.

Superior Electoral Court (TSE) President Alexandre de Moraes said the PL complaint was "offensive to democratic norms" and had sought to "encourage criminal and anti-democratic movements".

Lula's victory - with 50.9% to Mr Bolsonaro's 49.1% - has been ratified by the TSE.

Mr Bolsonaro has previously claimed that Brazil's electronic voting system is not fraud-proof.

He has still not conceded defeat, but has given the go-ahead for a presidential transition. He stepped away from the public gaze after losing the election on 30 October.

BBC
 
"Hurts My Soul": Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro Breaks Silence On Election Defeat

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro broke his uncharacteristic silence about his electoral defeat on Friday, saying it "hurts my soul."

Bolsonaro had not spoken publicly since his narrow loss to leftist rival Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in bitterly-fought runoff elections on October 30, and he has only made one public appearance.

"I've been silent for practically 40 days. It hurts, it hurts my soul. I have always been a happy person among you, even risking my life among the people," he said.

Following his defeat, thousands of his supporters blocked roads and demonstrated in front of military barracks to ask the army to prevent Lula from taking power.

Brazil's top electoral authority last month threw out a challenge by Bolsonaro's party against his election defeat and fined it more than $4 million for bringing the case "in bad faith."

Bolsonaro will remain in office until January 1.

Lula unveiled on Friday ministers in the key posts of foreign affairs, justice, defense, and chief of staff.

NDTV
 
Bolsonaro's Supporters Try To Invade Brazil Police Headquarters

Supporters of far-right Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Monday attempted to invade the federal police headquarters in Brasilia, the capital, protesting the arrest of an indigenous leader in the first major flash of post-election violence.

Television images, as well as videos shared by federal police officers with Reuters, showed burned-out cars, a bus that had been set on fire, and the sound of explosions and what appeared to be rubber bullets being fired.

Bolsonaro supporters, wearing their trademark yellow national soccer jerseys, could be seen rushing from the scene with sticks and throwing rubble. In another video, they could be seen trying to push a bus off a bridge in Brasilia.

The attempted invasion came after Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who has led probes into Bolsonaro and his allies, on Monday ordered the temporary arrest of José Acácio*Serere Xavante for allegedly carrying out anti-democratic acts.

It came on the same day that the federal electoral court (TSE) certified the Oct. 30 election victory of Bolsonaro's leftist rival, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, as president. After months of baseless suggestions that the electronic voting system is liable to fraud, Bolsonaro has yet to concede defeat to Lula, but he has not blocked the handover of power.

The incident rekindles memories of the Jan. 6 invasion of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of former U.S. President Donald Trump, Bolsonaro's political idol. It also raises security concerns about Jan. 1, when Lula takes office in a public ceremony in Brasilia.

Senator Randolfe Rodrigues, a key Lula aide, said there were concerns about the physical safety of Lula and Vice President-elect Geraldo Alckmin, as protesters had surrounded the hotel where he is staying in Brasilia. However, Lula's team denied reports that Lula would be removed from the hotel by chopper.

Brazil's incoming justice minister, Flavio Dino, tweeted that Lula's security was guaranteed.

WEEKS OF PROTESTS

Many of Bolsonaro's supporters have refused to accept the president's defeat, camping outside military bases across the country, urging the Armed Forces to overturn the result. Xavante, the indigenous leader, is one of the people involved in such protests.

"I cannot accept criminals reigning in Brasil," Xavante tweeted last month. "Lula cannot be certified."

On Monday, Bolsonaro met with hundreds of supporters in Brasilia and watched in silence, hugging young children, as they prayed for him. Last week, breaking weeks of post-election silence, Bolsonaro said his situation "hurts my soul."

"Who decides where I go are you. Who decides which way the armed forces go are you," Bolsonaro told his supporters at the gates of the presidential residence on Friday.

In its statement, the Supreme Court said Moraes "decreed the temporary arrest, for 10 days, of the indigenous José Acácio*Serere Xavante, due to evidence of the commission of crimes of threat, persecution and violent abolition of the Democratic State of Law."

It said Xavante had led protests across Brasilia and had used "his position as chief of the Xavante people to enlist indigenous and non-indigenous people to commit crimes," threatening Lula and Supreme Court justices.

Xavante had "expressly summoned armed people to prevent the certification of elected" politicians, the statement added.

Tensions spilled over after the arrest.

Flavio Dino, tweeted earlier on Monday that "the depredation and attempted invasion of the Federal Police building in Brasilia are unacceptable. Court orders must be complied with by the Federal Police. Those who consider themselves harmed must offer the appropriate resources, never practice political violence."

The Federal Police did not respond to a request for comment.

Brasilia's public security office said it had secured the area around Lula's hotel, and urged motorists to avoid the center of the city where many roads had been closed.

NDTV
 
Brazil's Lula Accuses Jair Bolsonaro Of Inciting Violence In Country

Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva accused far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro Tuesday of inciting violence, a day after pro-Bolsonaro protesters torched vehicles, clashed with police and tried to invade their headquarters.

Monday's violence rocked the capital, Brasilia, hours after Brazil's top electoral court officially certified Lula as the winner of the country's October elections, putting the final seal on the veteran leftist's victory over far-right President Bolsonaro.

The outgoing president "still hasn't recognized his defeat, and continues inciting these fascist activists protesting in the street," Lula, who is due to be inaugurated on January 1, told a news conference.

"He's following the same script as all the world's fascists," added the 77-year-old ex-president, who previously led Brazil from 2003 to 2010.

The protests erupted Monday night after the Supreme Court ordered the arrest of a pro-Bolsonaro Indigenous leader, Jose Acacio Serere Xavante, on charges of threatening the democratic rule of law.

Bolsonaro supporters set cars and buses on fire in central Brasilia and tried to invade the headquarters of the federal police, who fought them back with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Serere Xavante was accused of organizing "anti-democratic" protests around the capital, including outside the hotel where Lula is staying.

Bolsonaro supporters have been protesting ever since his loss in the October 30 runoff election, blocking roads and calling for a military intervention to keep him in power.

They allege a conspiracy to force Bolsonaro from power.

Bolsonaro asked the protesters to stop blocking roads two days after his defeat, but encouraged what he called "legitimate" protests.

Since then, he has virtually disappeared from public view, with few events on his official agenda.

Lula compared the outgoing president to fellow far-right leaders in Italy, France, Hungary and the United States.

Lula also continued adding names to his incoming cabinet.

Singer Margareth Menezes said she had accepted his offer to be culture minister, making her the first woman and first black person appointed to the new administration.

Aloizio Mercadante, a senior figure in Lula's Workers' Party (PT), was meanwhile named head of the Brazilian development bank, BNDES.

NDTV
 
<b>Tight security as Lula set to be sworn in as Brazil’s president</b>

Leftist leader Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva is set to be sworn in as president of Brazil under tightened security after alleged threats of violence by supporters of his far-right predecessor Jair Bolsonaro.

Foreign dignitaries, including 17 heads of state, will be in attendance. Among them will be the king of Spain and the presidents of Germany, Portugal, and a raft of Latin American countries.

Lula, 77, narrowly defeated Bolsonaro in October to win an unprecedented third presidential term after a hiatus that saw him spend a year and a half behind bars on corruption convictions that were later overturned.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/1/1/lula-inauguration-president-brazil
 
Brazil officially has a new but familiar president as Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was sworn in for the third time.

The politician, known as Lula, had held Brazil's highest office between 2003 and 2010.

He enters office having defeated Jair Bolsonaro in October with concern surrounding the inauguration ceremony amid fears Bolsonaro supporters may try to disrupt proceedings.

SKY
 
Supporters of Brazilian far-right ex-President Jair Bolsonaro have stormed Congress in the capital.

The dramatic scenes came a week after left-wing veteran Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's inauguration.

Supporters of Mr Bolsonaro - who refuse to accept that he lost the election - broke through barriers and entered the building in Brasília.

Police used tear gas but failed to repel the demonstrators, some of which smashed windows.

It is unclear if they are still in the building.

Footage uploaded to social media also showed rioters storming the nearby presidential palace and the Supreme Court.

Mr Bolsonaro's supporters are calling for military intervention and the resignation of Mr da Silva - better known as Lula - who defeated his far-right rival in October's election.

Many are drawing comparisons with the storming of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 by supporters of Donald Trump, an ally of Mr Bolsonaro.

Lula is currently on an official trip in São Paulo state.

BBC
 
^

Its pretty obvious the USA is behind this, as usual interfering with other nations but claiming to some great nation.
 
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