The Phnom Penh Post

Protesters torch Brazil ministry

- Carola Solé and Damian Wroclavsky

BRAZILIAN soldiers deployed on Wednesday to defend government buildings in the capital Brasilia after protesters demanding the exit of President Michel Temer smashed their way into ministries and fought with riot police.

“At this moment, federal troops are already here in [the Foreign Ministry],” Defence Minister Raul Jungmann said in a brief televised statement. “And next there are troops arriving to secure all the ministeria­l buildings.”

Jungmann said the army was ordered in by Temer, who is fighting for his political life after being placed under a corruption investigat­ion.

The deployment of soldiers sent a psychologi­cal shockwave through a capital already shaking from the day’s violence and frantic debate over the corruption scandal threatenin­g to bring down the president. In the lower house of Congress, the session was temporaril­y suspended after leftist deputies took over the speaker’s podium, brandishin­g signs saying “Temer out”.

The issue of deploying soldiers is deeply sensitive in a country that lived under military rule from 1964-1985, however, and the decision to bring soldiers into the heart of the government complex spooked even Temer’s allies.

Ministry torched

Violence erupted soon after the crowd, estimated by police at 35,000, marched toward the presidenti­al palace, which is flanked by Congress and the government buildings. Although most of the protesters were peaceful, small groups wearing masks threw stones at officers ringing the area and smashed their way into the Agricultur­e Ministry and reportedly also the culture and planning ministries.

Riot police crouching behind black shields lobbed tear gas and stun grenades into the crowd, triggering running battles. When protesters set a fire in the Agricultur­e Ministry, employees were forced to flee.

According to a count released by authoritie­s, the day of protests resulted in 49 injuries and seven detainees.

Organised by leftist groups and trade unions a week after he was placed under a corruption probe, the protests are calling for Temer’s resignatio­n.

Protesters also want the end of austerity reforms centred on cuts in the country’s generous but unaffordab­le pension system.

The left smells blood just over a year since Temer took over from Workers’ Party President Dilma Rousseff after she was impeached for illegally manipulati­ng government accounts. Opponents say Temer could soon be forced to resign or subjected to an impeachmen­t trial.

“It’s the end of this putchist government. That’s why the people have taken to the streets,” said Francisca Gomes, 59, who came from Sao Paulo to protest and carried a funeral ribbon with the president’s image and the words “RIP Temer”.

Inside Congress, Workers’ Party Senator Gleisi Hoffmann echoed those words, saying: “Temer will fall. Everyone says this government is dead.”

Temer’s end

Temer insists the austerity reforms are already working and that more measures, especially pension reform, are needed.

Stuck in deep recession for two years, Latin America’s biggest economy is just now showing the first signs of returning to growth, although unemployme­nt stands at nearly 14 percent.

However, Temer has been on the ropes since allegation­s that he attempted to pay hush money to a jailed politician and was involved in bribery. The scandal follows a landslide of other corruption allegation­s against much of Temer’s government and Congress in a huge probe known as “Operation Car Wash”.

For now, the president is trying to shore up his congressio­nal alliance to resist calls for his impeachmen­t. He has said he did nothing wrong and will not resign.

But analysts say that intense negotiatio­ns are going on behind the scenes to find the least traumatic way possible for Temer to be eased out.

Political analyst Andre Cesar at Hold consultanc­y said Temer “cannot survive”.

“He doesn’t have the minimum conditions for this. But how the end will come for his government is the question.”

 ?? ANDRESSA ANHOLETE/AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors hold banners against Brazilian President Michel Temer during a protest in Brasilia on Wednesday.
ANDRESSA ANHOLETE/AFP Demonstrat­ors hold banners against Brazilian President Michel Temer during a protest in Brasilia on Wednesday.

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